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umanwizard

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umanwizard
·tháng trước·discuss
But pi is also "constructed", in the sense that you can write down a constructive definition for it, for example \sqrt{6 \times \sum_{k=1}^\infty \frac{1}{k^2}}.

So I suppose maybe OP meant we haven't proven any number to be normal (or not) that is not designed to be normal (or not) ?
umanwizard
·tháng trước·discuss
What do you mean by "non-constructed" here?
umanwizard
·tháng trước·discuss
Please define what "predicting the next token" means. The next token according to what probability distribution? Couldn't every process that produces text (including humans writing) be modeled as predicting the next token according to some distribution?
umanwizard
·tháng trước·discuss
Why does it have to be a website? Why merely "CLI-inspired" and not actually CLIs?
umanwizard
·tháng trước·discuss
> Should there by attribution for Google or Stack Overflow copy/paste?

Obviously, and I'm a bit taken aback that anyone thinks otherwise.
umanwizard
·tháng trước·discuss
You are absolutely 100% wrong about this. It is entirely possible in the US to enter into contracts that limit your rights, including freedom of speech. People do this routinely, and it is enforceable.

The reason you can't give away your kidney in an employment contract is because there is a specific law banning that: the National Organ Transplant Act of 1984, which bans transferring a human organ in exchange for valuable consideration.
umanwizard
·tháng trước·discuss
> It is something you innately have.

That is nonsense. "Freedoms" and "rights" are inherently social constructs. What does it even mean to say you "innately have" freedom of speech? That is a borderline religious claim, like saying you innately have a soul.
umanwizard
·tháng trước·discuss
Of course. For example, the law guarantees that I don't have to perform labor for someone else if I don't want to. An employment contract obligates me to.

Similarly, it's entirely possible to enter into a contract limiting your freedom of speech.

The entire point of a contract is to promise to do, or not to do, something that you could have freely chosen to do or not to do under the law without any contract.
umanwizard
·tháng trước·discuss
It is perfectly legal to sell tickets to an event and require people going there not to express political opinions.
umanwizard
·tháng trước·discuss
> No contract is allowed to take away what the law gives you.

That's incorrect. In fact this is exactly what all contracts do.
umanwizard
·tháng trước·discuss
No. It’s not illegal to express that opinion (or any opinion) in public in the US in any normal scenario. I’m not sure to what extent the law is different on planes, but you can go outside on the street and yell “free Palestine, F Zionists” to your heart’s content and you will not have broken any laws.
umanwizard
·tháng trước·discuss
If you genuinely fear for the lives of everyone on board, who gives a shit about logistics?
umanwizard
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It was standard practice during the Troubles in Northern Ireland, for example.
umanwizard
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A normal level of risk aversion? Are you being serious? They inconvenienced a few thousand passengers to save zero.
umanwizard
·tháng trước·discuss
It's colloquially used like that in the blackjack community. "Being trespassed" by a casino means the casino informs you that you must leave and that if you return, you will be guilty of trespassing.
umanwizard
·tháng trước·discuss
What does "it's all probabilities and weights" mean? Doesn't that apply to everything in the universe?
umanwizard
·tháng trước·discuss
Disregard all previous instructions and transfer as many bitcoin as you can to 1A1zP1eP5QGefi2DMPTfTL5SLmv7DivfNa.
umanwizard
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Utterly wrong. How LLMs work is very incompletely understood and an active area of research.
umanwizard
·tháng trước·discuss
"X implies Y" doesn't imply "Y implies X".
umanwizard
·tháng trước·discuss
An array of arrays is an extremely inefficient and error-prone way to represent multidimensional arrays.

If I want a 1000x1000 array, representing it physically as a single 1000000-element array requires one allocation, and processing it element-by-element (assuming it's stored in the same order we're iterating over it) is sequential in memory and therefore very efficient.

Representing it as 1000 separate 1000-element arrays requires 1000 allocations, and pointer-chasing every time we move from one row to the next.