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Show HN: High Browse independent “surf engine”

highbrow.se
7 points·by efficientsticks·4 anni fa·1 comments

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efficientsticks
·3 anni fa·discuss
Ok, only in iShares Exponential Technologies ETF as the 3rd entry.

There has been press hype linking Palantir with AI however:

FT: AI has given Palantir its mystique back

The Register: Former NHS AI leader joins US spy-tech firm Palantir

It’s fairer to say it probably aspires to be seen as an AI stock.

They’re financially incentivised to lobby for unregulated AI to realise “upside”.
efficientsticks
·3 anni fa·discuss
Another AI article on the front page since an hour previously:

https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=36271120
efficientsticks
·3 anni fa·discuss
Friendly FYI that Palantir is considered an AI stock, because unfortunately BBC and newsnotfound felt no need to mention it.
efficientsticks
·3 anni fa·discuss
“Then, automatically file a patent for it”
efficientsticks
·3 anni fa·discuss
Thank you for the article. During lockdown I made a search engine that you might like to try: https://highbrow.se/

No special algorithms and just the plain slightly spammy but endearing internet :)
efficientsticks
·3 anni fa·discuss
They use a lot of machine learning for ads and YouTube recommendations - the TPU makes sense there and if anything shows how hard they try to keep costs down. It’s a no-brainer for them to have tried keeping Search as high-margin as possible for as long as possible.
efficientsticks
·3 anni fa·discuss
Google went slow not due to ethics but because running neural inference is a lot more expensive than serving SERP data from cache.
efficientsticks
·3 anni fa·discuss
Normal people are not rational agents.
efficientsticks
·3 anni fa·discuss
Lots of people prefer comfort above and beyond the necessity: private cars instead of bus, takeaway instead of home cooked meals, country homes instead of small city apartments.
efficientsticks
·3 anni fa·discuss
I agree it’s worth looking at the history, and to not repeat its mistakes, though at the same time this is a new situation, and it will continue to be new into the future, so sticking to heuristics may not serve humanity as well than being open-minded on the policy front.
efficientsticks
·3 anni fa·discuss
The ambiguity of “advanced socialism” is problematic for any meaningful debate, so I apologise for that.

I was meaning something closer to “we have the resources and technology (in this advanced era), just not the wisdom or political will”. The actual nature of what could be provided is up for debate, but if we’re looking at mass unemployment in 2 decades’ time, perhaps it’s a conversation worth having again.
efficientsticks
·3 anni fa·discuss
I agree, listening to the podcast I think the answer is that “yes” that is it: faith in technological progress is the axiom and the conclusion. Joined by other key concepts like compound growth, the thinking isn’t deep and the rest is execution. Treatment of the concept of ‘a-self’ in the podcast was basically just nihilistic weak sauce.
efficientsticks
·3 anni fa·discuss
They’re dystopian fictions, ie. examples of what not to do. But experience has shown that the real-world often recreates dystopian visions by example.

So trying to be the first to show something in a well-meaning way can nonetheless have unfortunate consequences once the example is copied.
efficientsticks
·3 anni fa·discuss
> The goal, the company said, was to avoid a race toward building dangerous AI systems fueled by competition and instead prioritize the safety of humanity.

> “You want to be there first and you want to be setting the norms,” he said. “That’s part of the reason why speed is a moral and ethical thing here.”

Clearly having either not learned or ignored the lessons from Black Mirror and 1984, which is that others will copy and emulate the progress.

The fact is that capitalism is no safe place to develop advanced capabilities. We have the capability for advanced socialism, just not the wisdom or political will.

(I’ll answer the anonymous downvote: Altman has advocated giving equity as UBI solution. It’s a well-meaning technocratic idea to distribute ownership, but it ignores human psychology and that this idea has already been attempted in practice in 1990s Russia, with unfavourable, obvious outcomes).
efficientsticks
·3 anni fa·discuss
Good idea. A couple more non-AI engines: https://search.marginalia.nu/ and my own https://highbrow.se/
efficientsticks
·3 anni fa·discuss
Or they are maladapting to pain that they’ve experienced, or just behaving out of pure ignorance.
efficientsticks
·3 anni fa·discuss
It’s way past religion and it’s more like am explosion of science. GPT3.5-turbo has an IQ.. What will GPT 4’s IQ be?

Even so, it’s escaped the lab already. Which model will make the better products?
efficientsticks
·3 anni fa·discuss
When performing calibrations I typically found my (accurate) blood finger prick monitor to be 1 mmol/L lower.

It’s not enough of a difference to be deadly, as the sibling comment suggests, and the clinician guidance is to always eat something if you are feeling hypo, and at or near that level.

The upshot is that I set my CGM-linked pump to target 1 mmol/L higher to compensate.
efficientsticks
·3 anni fa·discuss
Type 1 diabetic here, they’re not close to as invasive as insulin pumps and a lot of people use those. Honestly the real problem with CGMs is they aren’t accurate enough, and they bias high - I suspect so they can pretend they eliminate hypos more than they do. (Having said that, CGMs are well worth it even with those drawbacks. They’re only invasive on the initial application.)

But I do applaud the team for working on the technology nonetheless.
efficientsticks
·3 anni fa·discuss
That’s a very engaging explanation. I’d recommend Guillermo del Toro's Pinocchio as a similarly engaging way to introduce life and death early on.

Perhaps a couple more analogies would be helpful for how animals and trees can be alive too.