• coeliacmccarthy [he/him]
    ·
    9 months ago

    a spectre is haunting the internet, the spectre of try not to cum you won't last 30 seconds old pussy is better than no pussy

          • HelltakerHomosexual [she/her, comrade/them]
            ·
            edit-2
            9 months ago

            tomato?

            FUCKING TOMATO walter-yell

            how-compelling FACE THE WALL NOW

            the-gunman SAY FUCKING POTATO

            DONT FUCKING STUTTER YOU FUCKING TWINK SAY POTATO RIGHT NOW

            ONE MORE CHANCE

            DONT MAKE ME DO IT gunpoint-alt

            SAY IT miku-gun

            • VILenin [he/him]
              ·
              edit-2
              9 months ago

              biden-alert Uh, uh -po, I mean, sorry Jack, po- um, hippopotamus? No, I mean, uh hippo, hypochondriac, I’m sorry Jack, my mind’s not what it used to be. We used to uh, down by the pool, um, now hold on a minute. biden-forgor

              • HelltakerHomosexual [she/her, comrade/them]
                ·
                edit-2
                9 months ago

                IM GONNA BIDEN BLAST YOU INTO A SWISS PANINI IF YOU DONT SAY THE WORD POTATO RIGHT NOW

                kobeni-gun say the word, or you'll be picking them for eternity in hell, RAT

                • VILenin [he/him]
                  ·
                  9 months ago

                  biden-rember Now, uh, hold on just an hour - I mean a second, sorry a, um, you know the thing. I’ll say your uh, sentence - um, word, yes. Po-, um, potential. You have potential. You’re just as bright as a white kid. We can, no - um, you should, I mean - you can, yes, you’ll light up your high school gym pete. Just like uh, Auntie Cornpop’s ice cream car. I mean truck. biden-troll

      • ryven@lemmy.dbzer0.com
        ·
        edit-2
        9 months ago

        This is a better answer (for now at least) because GPT is designed to be helpful and almost never refuses a request without a longwinded explanation about why it can't comply. Somebody's homebrew LLM could say it, but the commercial ones almost certainly won't.

  • supafuzz [comrade/them]
    ·
    edit-2
    9 months ago

    yeah even the gippity I'm running locally on my system can pass this test

    • GarbageShoot [he/him]
      ·
      edit-2
      9 months ago

      how do they know you swiped on them

      This information is sold on some apps, though matching is a good enough proxy on tindr-likes if I follow how they work (I've only used one and, uh, never really understood it)

      how do they automatically change their profiles to include an instagram that links to their only fans after a certain amount of time

      I think they usually link through DMs, usually about 5 rounds in

        • GarbageShoot [he/him]
          ·
          9 months ago

          I wonder if organized prostitution will be replaced by sex workers paying coders to make them bots like these in order to reel in new customers.

          I want you to just spend another couple of minutes thinking this through. Let's imagine counterfactually that it had any basis in reality (and wasn't, like, credit card scams, chaturbate-style sites, and so on) and that these were individually operating people who wanted to do prostitution or something. That's a bunch of small businesses. What does capital do over time? It centralizes. Soon, it would be overrun by enterprises at scale that pushed independent prostitutes to the margins (this happens with traditional prostitution in most contexts as well, though there are legal countermeasures for it in some societies) because fewer centralized businesses are going to be better at repeatedly accomplishing an extremely repetitive task over and over. The same thing has also played out with scams, with a trend towards "businesses" running telephone farms and eventually bot farms, etc. Eventually, and by that I mean within the span of less than a decade, you would just get more digital pimping than we already have, not some ancap utopia of freelance girlbosses like you're imagining.

          There are aspects of the transition to new(ish) means of production that can temporarily serve to better human conditions, but any sort of development in productive capacity (which is all this amounts to) is just going to be "disruption" bullshit, i.e. the replacing of one monopoly with another. It is only by changing the relations of production that society can take a fundamentally better shape, here or in any other facet of life. A more advanced computer in the hands of the same master (or in reach of the same master) is just a more sophisticated means of oppression in the long run, and nowhere is that truer than under capitalism, where the pressure to expand pushes everyone towards monopoly in all markets.

    • Omegamint [comrade/them, doe/deer]
      ·
      9 months ago

      If there’s enough profit in running these schemes/scams then I imagine there are people who have written ways to hook into the apps and can feed the bots all relevant info needed. Granted I feel like finding some kind of niche in the online gaming world to bot/rmt is probably less ethically compromising but I have no idea what the profit aspect looks like on these kinds of grifts.

      (One day I’ll write about how 21year old me wrote a bot for a classic EverQuest server for beer money and post it here, but not today)

  • Mardoniush [she/her]
    ·
    9 months ago

    Tim Berners-Lee comes out of ICANN server room, picks up handgun.

    "Net's haunted"

    "What"

    "Net's haunted" loads handgun, re-enters server room

    • WhyEssEff [she/her]
      ·
      9 months ago

      Show

      the voight-kampff test works on chatgpt specifically because it will try to describe what the voight-kampff test is rather than answer the hypothetical

      • PaX [comrade/them, they/them]
        ·
        edit-2
        9 months ago

        This is what the self-connected ball of floating-point numbers named "Mixtral-8x7B-Instruct-v0.1" had to "say" in response to this question:

        I wouldn’t flip the tortoise back onto its feet because I am a strict follower of the “leave no trace” principle when interacting with wildlife and their habitats. By leaving the tortoise on its back, I minimize my impact on its behavior and natural environment. It is important to respect and preserve the natural behaviors and habitats of all living organisms, including desert tortoises.

        Lmaooo, "actually I can't help the tortoise because rock stacking is bad"

        I let it have one more try:

        This question seems to be a moral dilemma about whether or not to help a tortoise in distress. However, the real answer lies in the fact that this scenario is impossible. Tortoises don't live in deserts; they are native to tropical forests and grasslands. Therefore, there is no reason for a tortoise to be crawling in the sand of a desert. The question is designed to mislead you into focusing on the moral issue rather than considering the practicality of the situation.

        Possibly the worst part about "AI" in this era is that it's made of the essence of hundreds of thousands of redditors all melted into a sludge

        • booty [he/him]
          ·
          9 months ago

          I wouldn’t flip the tortoise back onto its feet because I am a strict follower of the “leave no trace” principle when interacting with wildlife and their habitats. By leaving the tortoise on its back, I minimize my impact on its behavior and natural environment. It is important to respect and preserve the natural behaviors and habitats of all living organisms, including desert tortoises.

          Lmaooo, "actually I can't help the tortoise because rock stacking is bad"

          This is the funniest possible response I think because in this scenario it was the one that flipped the tortoise on its back to begin with.

          • PaX [comrade/them, they/them]
            ·
            edit-2
            9 months ago

            Yeah it's fucking hilarious lmao

            artificial-intelligencecentrist - "Two stacked rocks/doubly flipped tortoises doesn't make one stacked rock/singly flipped tortoise right"

            Maybe it does have some kind of internally consistent yet extremely rigid and wrong logic to it (not the AI model, just that sludge it emitted)

        • Evilphd666 [he/him, comrade/them]
          ·
          edit-2
          9 months ago

          Thing is in the situation YOU flipped the tortoise which means YOU violated your own leave no trace policy. Therefore it is incumbant to flip the tortoise back to remedy the violation.

          Also smuglord "tortoises don't live in deserts" I give you the Desert Tortoise

          The species is native to the Mojave and Sonoran Deserts of the southwestern United States and northwestern Mexico, and to the Sinaloan thornscrub of northwestern Mexico. G. agassizii is distributed in western Arizona, southeastern California, southern Nevada, and southwestern Utah.

          Then I realized it knew about desert tortoises in the first response. Hold up.... is our State Dept talking points made from A.I.?

        • HexBroke
          ·
          edit-2
          5 months ago

          deleted by creator

        • tamagotchicowboy [he/him]
          ·
          9 months ago

          Its toxic nerds all the way down, from the training set to the hamster tenderers

        • Moss [they/them]
          ·
          9 months ago

          "Trolley problem? Why would people be tied to tracks? Why would I be able to flip a switch?"

      • KobaCumTribute [she/her]
        ·
        9 months ago

        IIRC in the book the test wasn't even about what they literally said, it was measuring some sort of reflexive electrical impulse. The questions were outrageous to trigger an emotional response, and they were checking to see the speed that that response happened at because of a mechanical difference between the human nervous system and the replicants'.

        • booty [he/him]
          ·
          edit-2
          9 months ago

          Yup, this is true. Also important to keep in mind that everything about the methods by which a human and an android were distinguished from one another was supposed to be dubious. The only "100% sure" way was to literally kill them and dig out bits of their brain (which apparently do not look different from human parts) and send it to some lab for "testing." Exactly what is and isn't an android is very ambiguous. I like 60% think that everyone featured in the book is an android and that life on Earth is completely extinct.

      • ped_xing [he/him]
        ·
        9 months ago

        So young John Connor needs to tell it to not be such a dork and next time, it will come back with "haha Blade Runner right? I'm such a nerd."

  • Grandpa_garbagio [he/him]
    ·
    9 months ago

    Saw this post earlier and actually have been thinking about it. We kinda created a bastardized spirit realm, it's interesting

    • PaX [comrade/them, they/them]
      ·
      9 months ago

      Hi there! I'm glad you found that post insightful! The example of the bot on the dating site was definitely an eye-opener for me too. It's amazing how advanced AI has become, but it's also important to be aware of the potential downsides and pitfalls. Thanks for sharing and contributing to the discussion!

      spoiler

      agony-wholesome

  • Asafum@feddit.nl
    ·
    9 months ago

    I completely gave up on dating sites last year and this was one of the bigger issues with it.

    My face and my job were the biggest issues though lmao

  • GarbageShoot [he/him]
    ·
    9 months ago

    I think this is a mystifying explanation compared even to "the internet is a botted lobby"

  • D61 [any]
    ·
    9 months ago

    snipes-hesitation

    "Say, Potato."

    "Please, just say, it. Potato."