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CarrieLab

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Submissions

Introduction to Reinforcement Learning with Human Feedback

surgehq.ai
1 points·by CarrieLab·3 anni fa·0 comments

The Expanding Moral Cinematic Universe

lesswrong.com
1 points·by CarrieLab·4 anni fa·0 comments

Netflix's Ad-Supported Plan Reportedly Won’t Allow Downloads for Offline Viewing

variety.com
1 points·by CarrieLab·4 anni fa·0 comments

The mega merger killed Batgirl

theverge.com
8 points·by CarrieLab·4 anni fa·0 comments

Playing video games has no effect on wellbeing, study finds

theguardian.com
2 points·by CarrieLab·4 anni fa·0 comments

Most Americans think NASA’s $10B space telescope is a good investment

theverge.com
8 points·by CarrieLab·4 anni fa·0 comments

EU will require all new cars to have speeding prevention technology by 2024

gagadget.com
5 points·by CarrieLab·4 anni fa·0 comments

‘An Invisible Cage’: How China Is Policing the Future

nytimes.com
12 points·by CarrieLab·4 anni fa·2 comments

Major retailers creating “face prints” of their customers

smh.com.au
7 points·by CarrieLab·4 anni fa·0 comments

Remote workers may soon be able to live and work tax-free in Bali

fortune.com
3 points·by CarrieLab·4 anni fa·0 comments

Netflix's plan to charge people for sharing passwords is already a mess

businessinsider.com
6 points·by CarrieLab·4 anni fa·0 comments

Is Elon right? We labeled 500 Twitter users to measure the amount of Spam

surgehq.ai
7 points·by CarrieLab·4 anni fa·5 comments

Google Unveils 4th-Gen TPU Chips for Faster Machine Learning

tomshardware.com
4 points·by CarrieLab·4 anni fa·0 comments

Elon Musk suggests charging govs and corps a ‘slight cost’ to use Twitter

theverge.com
6 points·by CarrieLab·4 anni fa·0 comments

Artificial Intelligence and Chemical and Biological Weapons

lawfareblog.com
2 points·by CarrieLab·4 anni fa·0 comments

Writing a Super Bowl Worthy Commercial with GPT-3

surgehq.ai
9 points·by CarrieLab·4 anni fa·0 comments

Follow the science? If only it were so easy

nytimes.com
2 points·by CarrieLab·4 anni fa·0 comments

comments

CarrieLab
·3 anni fa·discuss
Interesting. I wonder how far we can push the "AI-generated UI" pattern with today's models. Is GPT 3.5 good enough for or will we need GPT 4, and if so, will it be fast enough (I assume yes, eventually)?
CarrieLab
·4 anni fa·discuss
I'm a PM at a human data company (https://www.surgehq.ai) that helps the large language model companies ensure their models are safe (we're the “clever prompt engineers” who helped Redwood assess their model performance).

We actually just published a blog today that includes our perspective on building “AI red teams” and best practices for AI alignment/safety: https://www.surgehq.ai/blog/ai-red-teams-for-adversarial-tra...
CarrieLab
·4 anni fa·discuss
Agreed
CarrieLab
·4 anni fa·discuss
Operational overhead and increased liability for lawsuits, I imagine.
CarrieLab
·4 anni fa·discuss
Think this just shows you truly important SEO is (to media companies). It's probably easily worth the trouble for them if there are SEO gains.
CarrieLab
·4 anni fa·discuss
ty!
CarrieLab
·4 anni fa·discuss
Ah thank you!
CarrieLab
·4 anni fa·discuss
How do you use it to bookmark?
CarrieLab
·4 anni fa·discuss
Definitely not a surprising result. Though I don't think the article is claiming it is a surprise.
CarrieLab
·4 anni fa·discuss
I appreciate that he's drawing clear lines (aside from the generically "severe" consequences promised in response to Russia using nukes, which seems like sensible strategic ambiguity). Have to wonder what the game plan is if Russia does indeed use nuclear weapons. All options seems terrible.
CarrieLab
·4 anni fa·discuss
For ipad, reading only (no social media, slack, etc).
CarrieLab
·4 anni fa·discuss
Breitbart.com on HN! That's new.
CarrieLab
·4 anni fa·discuss
Oh I think your high school pop music theory is spot on. I grew up in the emo era, can actively laugh at the music/fashion now... and still love it more than anything :)
CarrieLab
·4 anni fa·discuss
Have you seen this post / these examples? It touches on some what of you are talking about in terms of style transfer.

https://www.lesswrong.com/posts/r99tazGiLgzqFX7ka/playing-wi...
CarrieLab
·4 anni fa·discuss
> I don't think you'll have many takers here suggesting that things were magically better 40 years ago.

Ha, fair point. I must not realize how old I am, because I was attempting to reference the music of the 1960s and 70s, not 1982, which I agree is not many people's idea of the golden year for music ("Come On Eileen" notwithstanding).

> Sophisticated tools are a bit of a trap. People tend to create in ways that their tools make easier.

No doubt. Ableton, logic, and protools have drastically altered the norms of what modern music is "supposed" to sound like (ie tuned vocals, quantized drums etc). I do wonder what the next generation of music tech will bring.
CarrieLab
·4 anni fa·discuss
My intuition is that humans will continue to make art that takes advantage of technological advances, just like they always have.

The modern process of producing music would basically be unrecognizable to anyone 40 years ago — it's completely intertwined with technology, and far more automated. Yet music is as important as ever, and amazing music is being made (will politely side-step the pitfall of debating whether music was better 40 years ago!)

So I'm excited to see how visual artists incorporate tools like Dall-E into their artistic process.
CarrieLab
·4 anni fa·discuss
DALL-E 2 is a true "holy shit" moment for me. It's actually hard to believe it's real.