andrew21w
andrew21w t1_jdns5b4 wrote
Reply to Who do you think will be the winners and losers of the coming AI revolution? by tshirtguy2000
Man, some of you people are pessimistic without reason. Have some nuance.
AI is a double edged sword, like every piece of tech really.
It will sure as hell help the average Joe in more ways than one, especially in the medical field. However it will also enable bad actors.
What we need is get more of the good and less of the bad
Saying: "Billionaires bad, will fuck us all" is the easiest thing to say.
However, in all of history, technological advancements have helped even poorer people.
The greatest recent example:
The internet. We literally have all of human knowledge at the palm of our hands, we can connect with people who we wouldn't be able to in our lifetime, but at the same time, it's easier for companies to steal your data and spread misinformation.
See? It's double edged. A general rule of thumb is: If it doesn't have drawbacks it probably doesn't have much advantage to begin with.
Same with AI
andrew21w t1_jdn2t6a wrote
Reply to comment by IgnobleQuetzalcoatl in A recently submitted paper has demonstrated that Stable Diffusion can accurately reconstruct images from fMRI scans, effectively allowing it to "read people's minds". by iboughtarock
Thank you sir (or lady) for pointing it out. As I said: People are way too quick to become doomeristic when they have zero idea what they're talking about
andrew21w t1_jdn0vyv wrote
Reply to A recently submitted paper has demonstrated that Stable Diffusion can accurately reconstruct images from fMRI scans, effectively allowing it to "read people's minds". by iboughtarock
So many people of this thread, clearly didn't read the paper and just the title of the post
andrew21w t1_jde4ayx wrote
Reply to comment by underPanther in [D] Simple Questions Thread by AutoModerator
The thread you sent me says that polynomials are non discriminatory.
Are there other kinds of functions that are non discriminatory?
andrew21w t1_jdcb0vo wrote
Reply to [D] Simple Questions Thread by AutoModerator
Why nobody uses polynomials as activation functions?
My mere perception is that polynomials are the best since they can approximate nearly any kind of function you like? So they're perfect....
But why aren't they used?
andrew21w t1_ivm53n9 wrote
What he did was wrong, there's no other way to put it. But "The highest funded" seems a bit too much
andrew21w t1_itzrk2g wrote
Reply to comment by SleekEagle in [D] Poisson Flow Generative Models - new physics inspired generative model by SleekEagle
Honestly, if one could deal with that, in theory you could do that with latent codes, essentially making a better GAN or whatnot (assuming I got how these models work of course)
andrew21w t1_itzpm2n wrote
Reply to comment by SleekEagle in [D] Poisson Flow Generative Models - new physics inspired generative model by SleekEagle
I would love to see this being used for image to image transformations. I can see plenty of potential for this
andrew21w t1_itxt7q6 wrote
This looks neat as hell. Is there more literature where can I learn about this?
andrew21w t1_jdzxme9 wrote
Reply to comment by your_Assholiness in Degrees of the future by dustysaxophone
This depends on where you live as well. In my country for example we're kinda oversaturated with trades.
This is a bit anecdotal but I suspect it's valid in other areas of the world as well