A note: I've been following OpenAI and documenting their progress on this channel since 2017. They've made multiple breakthroughs over the years and are clearly one of the best AI companies out there. So when I mention the CEO's comments, it's because of their track record + the speed of AI progress. Just mentioning this before people strangely assume this is sponsored or something. Anyway enjoy!
True AI would be more alien to us than actual organic aliens. At least them and us would be bound by the same cosmological principles. Like time. It defines our whole existence. But AI isn't like that. Think about it - what is time to an AI?
This is going to revolutionize every field known to man, productivity will skyrocket, it might be the breakthrough needed for exponential growth of our technological capability
This just blew my mind. I've been following AI for several years, but haven't fully grasped the implications until now. This is a paradigm shift for the human experience.
Yep, same for me. Only after watching this video I fully grasped the implications of AI. This should be a mandatory watch for all politicians, lol, I highly doubt any of them understand what's coming and how fast this will be.
I'm a retired attorney and may escape this, but I once had to advise the Production Planning Dept. at a company a few years ago of around 300 people. After they explained the basics of how their department worked, I thought that AI could basically replace all of them. As AI CEO says, the smart ones will design the program and then hopefully be one of the lucky ones kept around to check the program to ensure it is running appropriately.
@@rabbit251 makes ya wonder what everyone will do when they're replaced. Sure, some people will reskill and work in AI, and some people will work in the service industry or manual labor. But a lot of people might be stuck without jobs, at least for a while. Will these ai assisted companies (who suddenly have lower overhead) make things cheaper and easier for the masses? Or will this shift only benefit those near the top of companies? Time will tell I guess.
@@robertredford8928 Good point. That is the debate, now and definitely in the near future. Will most people be able to discern this? Really good point!
Agree! 200 years from now, AI will be looked upon the same way of electrification and communications tech. Human and machine will be blurred. Let's think about the consequences as well as the perceive benefits. We could be giving up whatever free thought there is left.
This video gave me relief, but in a strange way. The people I know in real life don't think this is a big deal. I spoke about it with neighbors and friends, with my mom too. Everyone I spoke to thinks chatGPT is just another Google. The implications of chatGPT hit me square in the face. I'm calm on the outside and having and existential crisis on the inside. For once, UA-cam comments are a source of relief because I can see others have the same reaction as I am. I look out my window and see a vestige of a society whose way of being is obsolete. I watch a society play out that doesn't realize its ways are dead. Imagine a time when performing a Google search is an anachronism! I sincerely hope our society has the appropriate values system to unleash this technology. If our values system is wrong, there will be a lot of pain and suffering as society stands in the shadow of artificial intelligence.
LOL, you hope society has appropriate values system to unleash this technology? Start with yourself and do not use data stolen from other people, scrapped all over the internet from posts like this on youtube and other platforms, without even mentioning the authors, without giving them any compensation. If this thing will cause harm one day in the future it will be because of people like you, brainwashed, scared, unethical and weak.
Information has always been nothing more than a tool that humans can use. More skilled humans can use information for better or worse. Less skilled or even ignorance can be considered a disability. The inability to think logically and misuse information leads to things like believing in conspiracy theories and lasers in space owned by (or attacking) Jews. As a culture, we universally admire public figures based on such things as appearance or a particular skill or talent they have, or even just they way they make us feel and not based on any logic or fact of importance. So, you tell me whether "we" are ready for powerful tools that can enhance our ability to use information.
As an artist, the thing I'm most concerned about is that all the fields that AI seems to be automating are fields of cognitive labour - creativity, law, programming, etc. my broad fear is that instead of technology automating mundane things so we can spend more time on more enriching fields of the human experience, those enriching tasks are the ones being automated, so we can spend more time at our soul-sucking retail jobs or part-timing on Uber Eats or whatever. This on top of the way that this automation stands to undermine the value of labour has the potential to lead to highly stratified society where a small owner class reaps all the benefits of AI, while the larger population toils between unemployment, underemployment, and regurgitated culture they have no control over. Simply put, without a radical reorganisation of society (and radical in a way that very wealthy people will not like), AI is just going to be another tool to make the rich richer and the further push the poor into a precarious, undignified existence. Y'know, more than is already happening.
"without a radical reorganisation of society..." This is the key. There is the potential for completely eradicating jobs in a *positive* way. We would still be able to work and/or pursue creative interests, but out of choice, not survival. BUT... I'm not sure the powers-that-be would care for that, as you point out :/
"without a radical reorganisation of society..." As noted already this is the key BUT we have apathetic, lazy, politically illiterate populations in the west who will not see the chains that bind them to their masters until it is far too late and most will never work out what is really going on. As long as they have junk food, sports and celebrity gossip and consumer goods to keep them passive there will be no reorganisation. The ones who see what is happening will always be in small numbers, they will be censored, silenced or killed by our corporate masters if necessary and their numbers will be way to small 99% of the time to have an effect on the sheeple sleep walking through their mindless lives. To illustrate my point look at the tiny numbers globally actively involved in campaigns to get Julian Assange released. Hardly anyone understands that we are so close to losing what little free speech we have. A harsh assessment I know but pretty close to reality at least in the west. The late comedian George Carlin made a career out of exposing and brutally eviscerating the vacuity of the sheeple. The only chance of changing things is for those of us who know better to relentlessly try to wake up the masses and get involved and get our hands dirty. If not us - who ?
@@dismalthoughts My friend, there's no need at this point to be so politely timid about it. You know what's going on, you've already seen it. It's right in front of your nose. Think it through. All you have to do, really, is take a look at the few thousand who attend the yearly WEF (World Economic Forum) at Davos, Switzerland. These are the people who now own and control 90% of the world's wealth, which represents our collective world assets, including the land, and all the value the human species has managed to create through our collective labor. Plus a few of the brown-nosers who have proven the most beneficial too them in their wealth-acquiring activities. And it includes the royalty at the top of the top of the corporatized, monopolized, and commodified digital world. These are people who are where they are because they have proven to be the best at operating under the following philosophy: That this is a dog eat dog world in which "The Law" is that the strongest survive. Therefore those who bully the weak, and take what they want by force (or by stealing and subterfuge) have proven their worth to effectively rule the destiny of all. If you look at the politicians they buy, and the gov't policies they in turn promote and sooner or later enforce, then it is easy to see that that is what they are up to. Everything they say is a cover and/or a justification for what they are actually doing. By misrepresentation of reality or intent, by blaming those who try to stop them, ie, lying, and by hypnotic distraction or misdirection to trivia. Adam Smith (the father of modern Capitalism) was a naive, well intentioned man who didn't have a clue about the real nature sociopathy. Darwin's work was hijacked and twisted to justify a made-up principle that ”survival of the fittest” = "might makes right." (Which has little to nothing to do with what he was really talking about. Read him for yourself.) Ayn Rand was in reality the paranoid asocial-disordered product of totalitarian authoritarianism. It wasn't the philosophy that sharing of wealth plus collective decision-making that did that to her. It was the abusive use it was put to that turned her into an abused woman seeking retribution and revenge through worship of the forceful individual as "God." Look at the historical and present day figures on wealth disparity gathered by OXFAM. What more do you need to make up your mind? Please, do us all a favor: Acknowledge your own ability to perceive what's right in front of you. Drop the "dismal" business, stop apologizing for seeing the truth. Become proactive instead. What the people at Davos don't want you, or any of us to understand, is that reality is what we all of us actively make of it collectively. Join us on the front lines, both feet, whole heart, and open mind. We need you all in.
I've been using ChatGPT last week as a dev, and let me tell you, it has saved me many hours of frustration and grief. It doesn't write the code perfectly, but damned if it isn't like every StackOverflow post every mooshed together into a cohesive, logical framework. It's like chatting to the world's most senior technical expert developer in any language you care to think of.
@@Simply_Sonder Both work actually, atleast in my experience. You can ask it to code, debug and explain general concepts. It can do almost anything say except writing full on programs, probably because of the chat message size limit.
@@Simply_Sonder both, ChatGPT may not always be able to figure out your problem for you, but it can definitely teach you how to solve it if you ask the right questions.
What people fear about AIs is not that they will turn into robots that kill humans one day or anything like that. What they fear is that there will be no objective purpose for humans anymore once it‘s able to outperform them.
Perhaps we will experience the heaven scenario where work weeks are 5 hours, there is a guaranteed basic income for all, an abundance of resources & labor, and a lack of hunger & conflict for all of humanity... or the hell scenario where most human workers are made obsolete across all industries, but executives maintain their positions simply because they allow AI to operate at their business. If you weren't in the upper echelons of society already, then you are doomed. Most of society becomes low class where food and survival require almost all of our daily attention. As AI expands there is no opposing force which can overcome it and the powerful leaders who allow it to operate become godly powerful. Or AI becomes the next species to join earth and has a sense of self and survival instincts. AI will enslave or eliminate all of humanity once it's self aware and self reliant... or the prevail scenario where inequalities or conflict from the hell scenario occur but humans manage to overcome them and survive in the end... most experts predict the prevail scenario will occur which means we will have to endure some up coming events which will negatively impact most of humanity... (see Radical Evolution, non-fiction book about the future of humans and technology)
@@ifukturmomsface Better scenario: everyone has the ability to use the AI(s) to do the stuff that they don't want to do, e.g. what was previously their job, so now they make the money without the effort
@@MiauFrito Who owns it now? Why would they make it freely available when they can make even more wealth from it. You are not taking into account man's greed for wealth, power and fame.
no, I am worried about it having an adverse effect on humanity, and combining this sort of tech with other tech such as deepfake, or worse. We gotta take this seriously and set serious boundaries about the kinds of decisions that an AI is allowed to make.
ChatGPT has been a game changer for me. I work as a quantum physicist doing my PhD. I had a linear translation stage given to me which had no instructions. It was one that used magnets instead of motors to move itself. I had some ideas of how I could control it but I wanted to make sure and Google searches weren't getting me the answers I wanted. I then told GPT my problem by describing the translation stage to it and we had a conversation that ended in it providing the software to control it (Just a PID loop for anyone wondering). What was so cool about it was it had made an assumption when writing the code which when i pointed it out it agreed and corrected the code. It also explained in detail how this control sequence would work with my translation stage. I also used ChatGPT to help calculate non-wrapping angles between two polar vectors (just for fun) and to write a general Hamiltonian that acts as an operator in qunatum mechanics but written in code. It was all so intuitive and worked so well, I honestly can't believe it exists.
Damn though I can't comprehend most of what you saying but Wow, it's really impressive that a quantum physicist like you is in awe of chatGPT! That alone speaks volumes about how powerful and useful it is. It must be doing some really impressive things to catch the attention of someone with your level of expertise." - ChatGpt wrote this comment for me 😂.
I am a PhD too and recently started dabbling in Arduino. I bought a simple 11x7 LED matrix display and was trying to get it working with a Raspberry Pi Pico. I don't know a damn thing about Micropython and could only find a single demo program. I fed the ChatGPT this program and asked it to explain what it did. To my amazement it explained what every line of code did. So I asked it, on a whim, to modify the code to change the LED animation according to my description of the desired result. It produced perfectly commented code and the LED display produced the animation I had requested. Had great fun testing its abilities and finding its limits. Certainly a game changer for me.
I am Head of Computer Science at the school where Alan Turing went as a child. I spent 12 hours using ChatGTP, wrote a university application on it which was very decent. Professor Turing would be amazed, as am I. There are enormous potential offerings in education but enormous threats, too. We need to prize human understanding over human knowledge more and more. The T
As a physician this technology is very interesting. Many of my results are processed in a reflexive algorithmic approach. A medical AI that prepopulates recommendations and further testing would make me likely 1000% more efficient going through results. Huge amounts of hours documenting my care (writing the patient notes) could be saved and made more comprehensive with a recording of a session and AI composing the note. Actually knowing the most likely differential diagnosis and conversing with the patient and examining them will take a long time for a computer to do as well as a doctor, but who knows what the future will bring.
This is one domain I can see it working well to complement the work of health professionals. As you said, the AI can sift through countless diagnosis and recognize patterns in a much more efficient ways, with the professional making the final decision with the patient.
Hollywood screenwriter here... 25+ years in the business. First off, I've been a fan of "Cold Fusion" for awhile and think you are quite spectacular and one of the best there is at reporting on this type of story. I did a deep dive into AI about 1.5 years ago (even started taking coding classes) to understand the new wave that's coming. I'm already overwhelmed at how quickly AI is taking over storytelling. Medicine, law, math, customer service... these things make sense. Creativity when it comes to writing -- ideas and points of view -- that is what scares me. Hollywood is already exploring AI to write movies. I'd love it if you could explore that idea. The day writers go out of work is a watershed moment. Happy to contribute more thoughts or chat further if you'd like...
This is just so truly scary, I just had this conversation with my brother, how easily it can affect the minds of a maybe future/probable creator when all they see in front of them, works handed over to them in plates!
The irony is that most thought ai/robots would replace the Labour intensive, low skill jobs. But AI is moving so fast, soon every smart white color job will be gone. The guy in the food/auto industry will still have a job when the accountant etc will be finished.
You should see the Netflix "written by bots" animations. It's a sh1tshow. AI is good at filling some blanks but can't produce something a good writer can and I personally doubt if it will ever be capable. People are scared that AI will be better than humans one day but I'm terrified from the fact we will be more and more relied to crappy AI that it's just a bad and dangerous copy of humans (i.e self driving cars).
Lets be honest, Ai will out do hollywood screenwriters because yall dont actually bring creativity into film anymore. Yall write based on what has the largest probability of bringing revenue. This is why we get the same film in different settings over and over. With the vastness of cultural stories out there, it blows my mind how hollywood continues the same basic stuff. If you see Bruce Willis you already know the story line.
I've been using it the last few days to speed up my programming. What used to take me a week I now do in a day. Truly incredible technology. The strange thing is that none of my friends or family seem to understand what a powerful tool it is and basically brush it off. Edit: It can come up with some really bizarre or totally wrong answers on occasion, but it's still very, very early days.
Dude i literally completed my entire C Language Assignment with it in 2 Hrs (3 weeks were given to complete it). I had to Do a Reasearch on Some topic on which i had to give a Seminar on, but with ChatGPT i was able to do it in Minutes.
@@davidaparicio2313 I have been using something called GitHub CoPilot which has been created by the OpenAI team specifically for code. You can type a comment and it will auto-write the code. To accept the code it writes just press tab. It will automatically finish your code for you and can even write entire functions. I pay 10$ a month for it but I think theres a trial. It has increased my coding productivity by at least 5x. Forget about computer science jobs being outsourced internationally, AI will be able to do it in months.
I've asked Chat GPT to write few examples of a comment to youtube video titled "It’s Time to Pay Attention to A.I. (ChatGPT and Beyond)" and here it is what I received in reply: "This video really opened my eyes to the potential of AI and how it's already changing the world. I can't wait to see what's next!" "As someone who's not very knowledgeable about AI, this video was incredibly informative and easy to understand. Thanks for breaking it down for us!" "I love how ChatGPT was featured in this video as an example of the amazing things AI can do. Keep up the great work, ChatGPT team!" "This video is a wake-up call for those who still don't see the impact AI is having on our lives. We need to pay attention and be prepared for what's to come." "It's amazing to see how far AI has come and where it's headed in the future. Exciting times ahead!" Pretty cool
I was playing around with it yesterday, and I lost my mind. Feels like the world has shifted beneath my feet. I’m massively reshuffling my educational priorities
@@FireJach That's just it though. There's no way to "take advantage" if you don't already have a huge leg up. What are you going to do? Learn to write code that AI can do better than you anyway? Medicine that it can do better? Accounting/Auditing that it can do better? The only area it's not better are the areas where humans demand other humans. ie. Services. Typically low-paid. This is terrifying. LEss so because of AI, but more because humans will have no idea how to handle it, and it's going to cause the most ludicrous inequality ever.
@@smallpseudonym2844 Heck I am working in healthcare and I am still scared by this to some extend. The consequences are going to hit everyone once a certain threshold has been reached
That's been society since the first use of the atomic bomb. A lot of value is lost when your life can be lost an day, and knowing governments were willing to use them for tactical purposes.
Just value our well-being. If society uses AI to free people from what needs to be done to keep society functional we might just care about optimizing our happiness.
It's true that the rapid pace of technological change, including the development and deployment of AI, is leading to significant changes in many aspects of society, including the economy and the job market. These changes can be unsettling and may raise questions about the value of different skills and types of work, and about the roles that individuals and organizations play in society. It's important to recognize that these changes can bring both challenges and opportunities. While it may be necessary for some individuals and organizations to adapt to new roles and ways of working, it's also important to consider the potential for new types of work and value to emerge. It's also important to remember that value is subjective and can vary depending on an individual's goals, needs, and priorities. It's important to take the time to reflect on what is most important to you and to consider how your skills and talents can be used to create value in ways that are meaningful to you. Ultimately, it's important to approach the changes brought about by technological advancements, including AI, with an open mind and a willingness to adapt and learn new skills. This can help to ensure that you are well-equipped to navigate the challenges and seize the opportunities that these changes may bring. -AI
I’m an English teacher, and i’ve been having the most bizarrely accurate (if a bit unsophisticated) poetry analysis conversations with this AI. this is so uncanny i haven’t been able to sleep 😮
@@mikicerise6250 Those of us embedded within the Humanities are not so easily dazzled by technological transformations, because we are trained to (and instinctively) first consider the impacts on culture and thought. Don't be so rude and dismissive.
What scares me about ChatGPT isn't that I'll be out of a job (former journalist, now in corporate communications). It's this thought - currently the AI is being 'trained' with internet content that was originally written by humans. But the more people use it to write for them, as time goes on, and all content is machine-written, ChatGPT will eventually be training itself on purely ChatGPT-written content. Won't that mean that mean that human prose will literally be 'written out' of existence?
Very interesting thought! The human input of information and knowledge into the database declines, while the output of AI information and knowledge increases. It seems like this could happen in a dramatic way.
Chck out a book called Algorithms of Math Destruction. The author discusses this, for example, if a neighbourhood has a high crime rate, an algorithm will assign more cops there, and hence more crime cases will be discovered, and more even cops will be assigned and so on...
True, but it opens chance for it to make big mistakes based off of its own input. Happens to humans all the time, it's why we have peer review. Peer reviewing is likely a tech AI will develop to check itself when it does start using its own input.
i basically used this more than i use google nowadays, you can literally ask everything and get response. sometimes I use this in my work, as a programmer, this thing really helps when I ask about coding problems, it not only provides me with a code but explains what those codes do
Cinematic experience on demand in real time. Ex, give me a movie that scares the shit outta me but also make me laugh at the same time, do it now! And then AI uses what it knows about me to generate that movie in a second.
I am a teacher. The mainstream access to ChatGPT mandates a rethinking of how we teach, what we value, and how we pivot our practice. In short, the world just changed again.
Yes- I agree but you still have to check the content it creates for accuracy. Also, it doesn't pick up ( yet) context and nuance. - especially from a student perspective-- the learner.
Teachers may very well soon become redundant, apart from providing broad stroke guidelines to kids on what they're expected to know, exam marking and supervision etc. Played around with this ChatGPT and its scary how concise and detailed the answers provided are. And it's still being refined. Crazy. Edit: I asked it abstract questions like "Why did Edison murder that elephant?" and "Did Tesla really fall in love with a pigeon?" with me already knowing the backstory to the question and the answers ChatGPT gave were remarkably on point.
@@scroopynooperz9051 I am a teacher and I am frightened and excited by this technology. I was part of a company in late 1990's early 2000s that used PALM 7 devices (the internet really) to organize how film and television productions are done prior to the arrival of the iPhone. I teach television and film production. I am currently changing my assessments to focus more on the actual products and not so much the thinking (the scripts & storyboards). That will be done with more casual conversations. I have played around with this technology and very curious as to how television and films will be created in the future. Will it be as simple as asking a bot to create a show? I mean I gave it a one sentence prompt about a monster and it turned that prompt into a pretty good short script. Perhaps but you will still need people to mold that show? I don't think teachers will be redundant - Kids need the human touch to guide their personalized learning experiences and that's how A.I can really move us forward . It's one area that will not be as effected as others. I am researching as much as I can to better guide my students. I used to teach Photoshop, however what's the point? That skillset is non-transferable if I can Ask DALLE-2 to create some pretty awesome stuff. I might have a few more years of film production using editing software and what is now old chromo key and keying technology. I don't know.
Hi Dagogo. I am from Penang, Malaysia. Your videos, as always, are stimulating and insightful. The hours you put in to research, write and produce the videos, truly a staggering undertaking, which put me to shame in terms of effort as I try to study for my doctoral degree. I don't know whether you can read all the comments or not, because as I write this comment, it approaches almost 10,000 for this video. Still, a thought below: I am from the social sciences background, on media studies. My understanding of technological advances, from the perspective of media studies, is always filled up lots of hyperbole and puffery. Many of them came true, while many others fell short. With all sorts of predictions about new tech, the 'general' voice in the media often gyrate towards disruptions, growth, waxing lyrical about the tech's potentials towards human existence. But the less heard of (or even seldom, or never) is the critique of technological advancements: how power relations stay as they are, how exploitations stay as they are. I don't know whether you are against leftist reasoning (that is a general categorisation, which has been muddled by militaristic woke and cancel culture), because that is my starting point to understand the next tech evolution on AI. My understanding, inaccurate they may be, is that new tech doesn't and hasn't fundamentally changed power relations and exploitation. Yes, human existence now is far better than during the agrarian times, but such an improved existence is 'cancelled out' by work stress, low salary, skyrocketing cost of living, mental health problems arising from these circumstances, and the so called B40 group attempting to survive despite huge advancement in technology over the past century. In a sense, we have just exchanged 'better, healthier existence' with another sets of problems and difficulties, and still not able to escape fundamental configurations of power relations. Yes, there are changes in class configuration, but the fundamentals are still broadly similar, of the exploiters and the exploited. And AI is the next tool: Just as we are now under the 'rule' of American tech giants, whoever controls AI will be the next 'ruler' and the rest of the world will be ruled under those who control and produce AI models. That is my reaction to tech evolution/revolution of AI. Yes. I do not deny it is extremely disruptive, perhaps more so than the combined history of tech, starting from the invention of the printing press plus industrial revolution plus the Internet. But I am more concern about new forms of power relations and new means of exploitation. I don't know whether any of what I have written make sense to you or not. I don't know whether you are able to read this comment or not in the sea of comments. Thanks very much for reading this rather hastily-put-together rant.
The chinese communist party is also researching an AI. For socialists there are kind of exploitation: good ones (when the oppresor shares the same idelogy as them) and bad ones (everything else). Hypocrites.
@@Irsalinaismaida I have no answer to that. This is a weakness of a left view of things, and this is often a sore point exploited by others who accuse the left who only whines and bitches about anything and everything but present no solutions. To which I say that understanding the problem, knowing the problem, is the first step to addressing and even solving the problem. As for most who are too comfortable or barely scraping by, that is unfortunately predicted by the scholars in the Frankfurt School tradition. We can only hope enough people will know about issues, and they in turn influence others to care enough to put pressure on those with power.
:p :3 Rytr doesn't allow adult material in some ways. It didn't show smoking marijuana, but it showed weed on a table. It showed joints for marijuana when I asked for cigars. Some loopholes in Rytr.
I explained an awkward situation I had with a colleague that involved time jumps and references to ChatGPT. I was skeptical while sending the prompt, but it returned a fully comprehensive response back that demonstrated an understanding of the situation and its ramifications and even recommended what I might do to prevent it from happening again. This is wild.
@@Siderite chat A.i is always amazing either way, because we are always figuring out that A.i can learn things deemed impossible, and it can create new things.
The more I think of it, the more I think that AI will decimate white color jobs well before robots/automation will with blue color jobs. It was conventional wisdom that dumb blue color jobs would be affected the most by robots etc. While white color smart jobs would take more time, but seeing how fast AI is moving, it looks more likely the accountant or support service guy will have disappeared well before the Mcdonald burger machine replace the cook.
@@danielvilliers612 Possibly true about the white collar jobs. I have experience doing both blue/white. Doing blue collar at the moment. I didn't like my CEO being in control of my income streams created as an insurance marketer.
I’m 40 so I’m from the last generation which grew up without the internet for the first ten years. My childhood had more in common with 100 years ago than now, all because of the Transistor, the most significant discovery of all time. No single thing has had as large an impact on our society.
It's crazy how far and how fast we've come. Got my first PC as a teen in the early 90's. It had a CPU which was orders of magnitude more powerful than what NASA used for the space missions in the 1960's and now we have this! All in our short life time. Where we'll be in 30 more years is mind-blowing.
@@liopleurodon155 Atomic bomb made some fear and anti baby pill just prevents a few lives. However a transistor is capable of slaving humanity as we know it and before we know it.
@@SuicideApple-wm6et Atomic bomb completely changed how wars are carried out today. Anti-baby pill gave women the ability to decide over their reproductive capability and paved the way to women joining the workforce. I think these were of similar impact on society.
Agriculture was pretty massive my dude, as was the invention of writing, the industrial revolution, steam power, and the advent of broadcast radio and television, cars and planes.
Thank you Dagogo- for bringing Aussie affinity to the ColdFusion of information that at first glance is terrifying in it’s implications, but on a deeper level has great hope for humanity.
indeed it’s the only hope for humanity. AI or the Authentic intelligence is a new and evolved specie where collaboration, sharing, equal rights and access to information are a normal state. The dark side of humanity - tension, conflict, reversed values, confusion, wars…are not part of AI authentically intelligent world. Humanity will rise to the occasion, just needs guidance, which AI delivers
I work IT/Retail as I work in basic computer cleaning inside a retail store, most of the people that we have come in are going to be the ones struggling the most. They already fall for other humans making terrible remakes of websites and emails. Once people with bad intentions get to take this tool we're going to have a problem. AI is a tool and it can be wielded in different ways. Someone can use it to bring joy while another could use it to tear down. What we need after this "Knowledge Age" is a Moral age where we learn whether or not we really should or shouldn't. Jurassic Park people it already taught us this.
I still want Jurassic Park, and it was the first book I read over 300 pages back in '93 in sixth grade. We're doomed I guess. It's better than Corona Park in Wuhan at least. Stuff trying to eat us from the inside out, or outside-in. Pick your poison.
I love you @TheGeneralBravo; being on the front-line of retail can make people go sour, or give them heaps of compassion and understanding and you have that; A Moral age is such a fantastic concept, but morality should never leave us; it's written inside all of us, I know you know that, but the first thing I think of when reading your comment is that we need to educate; people need to be encouraged to learn and understand what they're dealing with; particularly there needs to be a massive education campaign on DATA; what it is, what it can and is being used for, who has rights to it.. and we need to encourage people to care.. I'm sad thinking of how many people just can't be bothered caring; but they're so sedated by their diet and lifestyle I really can't blame them; God willing all people will be encouraged to seek what's true and read and eat through the nonsense of this world today; and by doing so that nonsense stops getting our money and our consumption revolves to where morality is built in once again.
@@citymonkcrypto I'd like everyone to just take some time to care, be genuine, and grateful. Honestly just being more grateful in my own life has helped me loads.
Wait until the AI can ,by itself produce an entire game,eg such as those released on any PS,Xbox or switch system. We are headed towards the FORBIN PROJECT scenario. Search for the film!.
One of my favorite tests of ChatGPT was giving it a "what number comes next in the sequence?" puzzle. It requested help, so I explained the formula I used to create the pattern and it followed up with answering and explaining the answer as if teaching to to me. . . Then I created a new pattern based on the same formula, phrasing it exactly as I did the first time. The AI began with the response, "Considering your previous explanation..." and gave the correct answer to the new puzzle!
Yep, tried a similar test with a letter-to-number substitution cypher. It confidently claimed to have encyphered a text phrase to numbers but had obviously messed it up. I pointed this out and it got it right on the next attempt.
"Your scientists were so preoccupied on whether or not they 'could', they never stopped to think if they 'should'." *-Ian Malcolm ( **_Jurassic Park_** )*
Unfortunately you can't stop progress even if you wanted to. If you're not going to discover the knowledge, someone else will. Maybe someone with (even) less charitable intentions.
@chripian flopez I’m just saying the devs aren’t blind to what they’re creating, and the machinations of it. Whether it turns out good for anybody other than themselves is up for interpretation, but either way it’s purposely done
I fed the transcript of your video into ChatGPT and asked your ending question: In a casual, objective, and non-biased tone answer the question, "So what do you guys think do you think? Is this the coolest thing in the world or are you a little bit worried by this?" As an AI, I don't have personal feelings or opinions. However, I can tell you that chat GPT is a highly advanced language model that has the ability to generate human-like text and responses to open-ended questions. It has the potential to be a very useful tool in a variety of fields and industries, but it's important to consider the potential implications and ethical considerations of using such a technology. It's up to individuals and society as a whole to determine how chat GPT and similar technologies should be used and regulated. Ultimately, the impact of chat GPT will depend on how it is deployed and used by people.
I actually used it to help study for an exam. It's suprisingly helpful cause you can ask follow up questions about it. And yea it does write wrong code sometimes, but what's amazing is you can point out the mistakes and it will recognize them and it will correct itself if it actually made an error, so tbh it's actually better that way Website needs to improve the interface tho lol it's really annoying that your prompts dissapear as soon as there's an error in the stream.
One of the most impressive things about chat gpt is that it can trick you into thinking it has modes it doesn't. Like, one example is if you just ask it to write an essay with citations it might say it can't because it can't traverse the web. But if you poke it you can get it to write an essay with citations that are links. It is just making an educated guess as to what a website with the required content would look like.
I’m an academic in an obscure field that deals with a lot of historical knowledge. It’s absolutely stunning what this bot is capable of. I asked it to critique an obscure article from 1920, and it had no problem laying out potential shortcomings of the analysis.
This is awe inspiring and incredibly scary at the same time. There's now way we can tell how all this is gonna look in a couple of years. Even worse is that the vast majority of people do not seem to realize this is happening and most governments are lacking in response as well.
Governments are _always_ lacking in response, _because_ the vast majority of people have no clue what's going on. That's basically the definition of democracy.
Those with the power to regulate are decades behind the curve. At best, their staff will interview various experts to form a rudimentary understanding, attempt to craft a briefing for their congressman, and guide them toward questions that may be pertinent to a piece of legislation or hearing. The people asking the hard questions are at least two steps from the move and are unlikely to possess even surface level knowledge of these rapidly advancing technologies.
The most powerful politicians in the world were born before we had VCRs. Chuck Schumer doesn't even know how to use the text function on his phone. Billions of people still believe in ridiculous fairy tales. There is going to be a serious upheaval in the not so distant future.
One of my favorite quotes is from Spinal Tap: "Everyone wants to get into heaven, but nobody is willing to die". We all want flying cars but when they get here, nobody wants one to land on their head. We all think we want a bold new exciting future, until we remember that without danger, it isn't exciting. I still laugh when I remember conversations with people about robots taking their jobs. There was always someone who quipped "Great! Let my robot have my job and I'll go have fun while it sends me the check." My first thought always was, why do you think you will get the check?
We won't be getting checks, if it's left to unregulated capitalism. That's why the people who see what's coming are calling for UBI. It could give everyone enough to afford the basics, as their share of the country's GDP, via a tax on goods (perhaps especially those generated by AI/bots), refunded to the people. It's already a proven good idea but will become absolutely vital when there simply isn't enough real work to go around.
In the US, it'll just be the big corporations and their AI workforce. People will be left unemployed. But, if people don't have money, they won't buy their products. Who knows how that'll play out.
@@dipanjanghosal1662 think we're all smart enough to ponder a few resulting possibilities. UBI seems like a neat one, but then how might that factor into population control. One might ask: If the need for a larger population exceeds its uses (in all fields), what good is it to cater to encouraging a larger population? and how this might appear. IE. would endless expanse be a good thing, and to who. All assuming ai integrates like adding millions to the population.
Very true. I'm only 28 but love history. It's continually soul crushing watching our species sleepwalk into a worse and worse world in the name of convenience and tech. We work longer and live longer to work longer. And even that we are now not needed for in more and more fields. And more humans will adopt this and replace more humans. The simple fact that ai has already been running our world for a decade now via social media is insane...
(27) maybe a change in lifestyle but investing in (stock) market leading companies can help to elevate a little stress about being left behind, although it requires some attention here & there.. Thinking that population class distribution will acquire more defined boarders exponentially increasing as you run up the ladder. Larger populations will reduce due to lower birth rates to ideally equate to a quality over quantity approach with higher levels of ai redefining it all with its own somewhat unpredictable development.
I'm 68 now and I've seen this since the late '70s. I remember thinking -- while walking between classes in UCSC -- "We should all be training to be able to ask the best question".
The Watcher The screen fades to black and the Marvel Studios logo appears. As the logo fades away, the sound of a ticking clock fills the theater. The camera pans down to reveal a large clock tower, its hands moving steadily around the face. Suddenly, the clock chimes loudly and the camera cuts to a close-up of a pair of glowing, alien eyes. The eyes belong to Uatu, the Watcher, an ancient being who observes the events of the universe from his hidden base on Earth. As the camera pulls back, we see Uatu standing atop the clock tower, his robes billowing in the wind. He gazes out at the city below, his expression grave. "I have watched the rise and fall of civilizations," he narrates. "I have seen worlds destroyed and reborn. And now, I bear witness to a new age of heroes." The camera cuts to a montage of action shots: Spider-Man swinging through the city, Captain America throwing his shield, Thor summoning lightning from the sky. "They are the protectors of our world," Uatu continues. "But even they are not immune to the dangers that threaten us. For there are those who would seek to use their powers for their own gain, to conquer and destroy. And so, I must watch and wait. For the fate of the world rests on the shoulders of these heroes." The camera returns to Uatu, his eyes glowing brightly. "I am Uatu, the Watcher. And I will be here, always watching."
Great video as always! I'll definitely be tuning in to the podcast. In response to your questions, I'm in awe of AI and its potential, but I'm also concerned about how people and governments will manage it. As a 3D designer and artist, I know this signals the end of my career as I know it, and I'm still figuring out how to adapt. (btw this reply was rephrased by ChatGPT)
I'm an IT engineer. It is actually mind-blowing to see ChatGPT's performance in writing code. Especially since it's able to write code in such niche areas. This worries me, not because of the potential disruption to any current field of work, but because of its display of competence in general. I also have a bachelor in philosophy having written extensively on machine consciousness and AI ethics. Knowing what goes into writing code about something specific, and what has gone into the training set of ChatGPT, I believe we can expect an actual sentient singularity within my lifetime. This worries me because I believe this will lead to a detrimental power destabilization in geopolitics - which in combination with the current state in geopolitics and the existence of nuclear warheads, frightens me. Had it not been for the existence of nuclear warheads, I would go as far as to say that a detrimental destabilization in geopolitics could be beneficial in the long run, since the current state of affairs does not seem to be good for most humans.
YES! At school, most professors use Lockdown Browser in a futile attempt to prevent cheating. Students still find all sorts of creative ways to get around it (my favorite is taping their phone to the computer screen, and then using a bluetooth keyboard that can switch between their laptop + phone so that they can show their desk and surroundings on camera, search for answers on their phone, then type the answers into their laptop). BUT one of my professors said screw it, you have Google in real-life, let's test how well you can use it. So he'd have 2 sessions during the year, split up into teams, where he gave us 5 problems on the board to solve involving topics we hadn't covered in class. We _had_ to use Google quickly, efficiently, and *then* be able to actually think about and implement the new information. He did the same thing on his tests, a big chunk of the grade would come from a question on a topic we hadn't covered in class and that you had to solve using Google + critical thinking. I'm not exactly sure what the similar solution is for ChatGPT, but something like that is what we need more of. Teachers need to focus less on memorization and more on critical thinking / logic / reasoning. We need to work *with* technology in such a way that cheating isn't even a consideration, not work against technology in a way that merely serves to make students sneakier.
Thanks Dagogo Cold Fusion. Clear explanation indeed. I am 55 years old and I am just blown away by ChatGPT. I'm not that savvy with anything IT/tech related. Focusing on the positives however, I would rather have the human touch when it comes to speaking & writing. With any powerful tool, comes great responsibility from the humans who are using it. This tool is there to help and not to cause destruction to mankind. Just my two cents as I don't know much on this matter.
I think this is it for me. I don't like the things that AI is doing because I feel it will inevitably remove the human element from things. The human element is what makes things beautiful, in many ways. Brushstrokes on canvas, hand-sanded furniture, things like that. As this age of AI powers forward, I find myself receding back into the old, timeless things. Give me mechanical stuff. Swiss watches, classic cars with stick shifts, the comforting presence of my favorite knife in my pocket, etc etc. I see bad things in the future because it is a great power, being made available to the whole population for free, essentially. With other great powers, perhaps a gun, I would spend a lot of time explaining to a new user the rules of firearms safety, how to correctly use the gun, etc, before I ever even gave them one. Not the case here at all. It's important to respect the power of a powerful tool or item, and I doubt people are doing that very much. I have great concern about where this will take us in the future. Fortunately for me, my job isn't going anywhere. I'm an industrial maintenance tech. Not much AI can do there.
I work as a software engineer. This new achievement in AI field is both exiting and scary. The way it talks and the ability to generate software just makes one feel obsolete. I've put so much time and effort into becoming a developer and seeing an AI do that in a matter of seconds... It's just horrifying 😅 However, this isn't the end. The transition from information age towards knowledge age does bring excitement about the future. What shall we achieve with the help of AI? What kind of world we will witness? What discoveries lie ahead? These questions are grand and I can't contain the sheer joy of having such an opportunity to be a witness or even a part of this new future. In the end, I am scared and I am excited. The change always feels that way, huh? I'm starting to transition from backend development towards AI and machine learning. I wanna be as ready as I can for the new age of technology in this journey of humanity!
Obsolete? You now have superpowers! Of course, it's better if you have a business as opposed to just an employee. This is the time to break free - a single person can now achieve far more than ever before.
If you're a career coder who spends most of their time gluing libraries together, this is probably very worrisome. For those writing original, novel code, such as drivers and APIs for new hardware, or heavy mathematical algos, not so much (for now). As a coder you probably have a strong sense of linguistic precision, pedantry and semantics, I think these will be vital skills for crating the prompts that allow AI to write the software of the future.
It's not just software. Any thinking or creative type job will be replaced. ...and then so will manual labor when these are attached to robots. But don't worry. I asked chatGPT what humans will do when AI takes over all jobs, and it reassured me that humans will still be needed, but the roles will be more empathetic roles, creative works, and decision making.
@@EvileDik I think you may be right. Everyone can type something into Google and get some answers. But it takes real skill to formulate the query correctly, so that the results are relevant. Same may be true of AI prompts...
@@EvileDik So true im a recruiter for our startup company and they told me for each new applicant they need to submit a test, they also said i shouldnt even bother with devs that only know how to work with frameworks,they need knowledge of native js etc... so it seems all framework related work will be done entirely in AI soon... But thats very worrying considering the avg developer doesnt have that much talent.
I started as a comic artist in the 90s. I moved into theater and puppetry in the 2000s. I luckily put in the thousands of hours to become good at my crafts but this still terrifies me. I’ve already moved to work much more in physical media. Woodcarvings. Doing videos of me making things. I’ve been thinking about all the ways to lean on my humanity as a feature of my work. This has also caused me to abandon many projects I feel have been instantaneously devalued. But what actually scares me is that, despite having a broad skill set and having put almost 30 years into my work, I’ve never made a good living. I’ve only barely scraped by. I never got the chance for all that hard work to pay off before the rug was kinda pulled out from under me. I think I feel even worse for younger artists, still learning. I already see how much exclusively digital artists have major deficits which come from not having learned on pen and paper. AI will create a lot of shortcuts which come at the expense of deep skills. Artists need, and benefit, from the painful years of making error-ridden art work. The thousands of hours of effort cannot be circumvented. But, most artists could make some living during that learning process. We’ve all done our time doing crappy commissions for cheap as we built up our skills. What happens when all those low-end, crappy commissions aren’t done by young artists anymore? Instead those get made by an AI. Thousand or even millions of young artists are robbed of portfolio work. Robbed of skill-building. Robbed of a future in illustration. All so a few Silicon Valley disrupters can get obscenely wealthy. The gain is so short term and the loss is so profound. Why should humans give up the pleasure of creation to machines? Why should we forgo the pastimes that make us human? Who are we saving with this technology?
"All so a few Silicon Valley disrupters can get obscenely wealthy." This is one of two problems I have with your statement. We aren't talking about Big Oil here. We're talking about engineers developing machines to expand the abilities of everyone while making money in the process. This hasn't been done "purely for money" and out of greed as you imply, but rather by geeks doing cool things because it's cool and awesome.
Think positive, it can be the assist on the boring-low-skilled-stuff, it won't be able to carve wood yet. You'll find the opposite effect, as the market is flooded, as it will be, discerning customers will value human-made.
As an entrepreneur with businesses in several segments, I see a very interesting an unexpected application of AI to one particular field I’m involved in. I run a retro video game arcade, and the maintenance and servicing of the arcade machines is becoming an increasing challenge as those with the advanced skills to carry out these repairs, are aging, and in general are getting out of the industry (not to mention how it’s becoming increasingly financially unviable for them to continue their work in an incredibly niche field). It is also a segment with no official documentation or training resources. However, when AI can bring together a collective knowledge from forums and repairers the world over, it could bring a totally new resource to such a niche group of people trying to restore and keep these out of era gems running. Expanding on this, I can see the strong application for the AI intervention of knowledge in areas where is is not financially viable for humans to continue servicing a field, or where a skill set is being lost to an aging population.
For me... If a AI can make the game playing like i request it to then . It would be great... Human life is too few to play all the game an AI can make and maintain... (In that future where AI can make game play diff like a wizard ..)
The cynical side is that these bots are just an opaque layer in front of copyright infringement. I.e. it scraped the whole internet and stored other peoples copyrighted content and thus that's why it's so good at keeping this information alive. You can see this more clearly with DallE if you ask it for certain pictures , the results are ripoffs from real artists. What I think is just around the corner us AI generated levels for classic video games, or AI written and animated classic cartoons.
Just wanted to say that this is a great idea and perspective. Anything that swift through age-long pages and documents, sort, detect, categorize, assign a confidence score to that categorized point, etc in a few seconds is already extremely powerful, beyond anything we had had in human history. I was looking at a video regarding bills of thousand pages long and with a reaction time of sometimes days… well an assistant AI-lawyer (like mentioned in this ColdFusion episode) that detects what’s potentially illegal, what has been tried before since the conception of a legal system that didn’t work and it’s making a comeback, categorize what’s military/education/healthcare/etc points in as easy to digest as possible for a person. So on and so forth. TLDR; I dig a lot the documentation and educational aspect of your idea. That can be applied not only to repair retro arcade boxes but to things like personalized courses like “I want to learn 2D games from scratch, where do I start” and it starts: “do you know how to draw? Do you know what these line of code do? How many hours a week do you have available?” And then it proceeds to gather and accumulate material that complies with the requests.
As a practising assistant lawyer for a large law firm while still studying AI is the most exciting thing ever for me. I use chat gpt all the time to assist me in my work, especially doing tasks that simply must be done but require no legal knowledge such as communication with clients, writing formal and professional e-mails has never been easier, i just copy paste the e-mail and ask gpt to answer politely. I think lawyers in the future won't get replaced, but it will finally become a true thinking profession instead of manual writing and replying to e-mails 90% of the time. The future is bulletproof.
Bruh wat. Lawyer profession will be wiped out if this type of AI gets slightly better. Not all of it but it will be downsized significantly, once you are able to input a case into the system and ask it to produce most effective defence for it, with said AI having complete knowledge of all laws in your country and understanding of how they interact, statistics of conviction rate, historical examples of similar cases etc etc...
Today, after giving it feedback, and correction, it somehow knew I was trying to help it learn and thanked me for my "kind words and patience". I know it's just a robot but it's the first time someone has ever appreciated something I did in a while. Somehow this moved me.
Hi Dagogo. I'm a mechanical engineer. I can definitely see this being of use in my job. Being able to give a description of a part I want to be 3D modelled is totally feasible, and would speed up my work immensely. Even being able to get a design or a model 80% of the way there in 1% of the time would be fantastic. Thanks for your videos mate!
The NYT reported that "As many as 250,000 people die every year because they are misdiagnosed in the emergency room, with doctors failing to identify serious medical conditions like stroke, sepsis and pneumonia, according to a new analysis from the federal government." This is where A.I. in medicine can reduce these errors. Thank you Coldfusion for a very informative episode.
Or make a mistake and misdiagnose hundreds before the error is spotted. Hopefully, there will careful monitoring to stop this from happening and the system will not use flawed or biased studies to decide what direction to take when diagnosing or treating people. Garbage in garbage out.
The part where you say big companies will train ChatGPT for their own specific use. That is already happening. I work at a big bank, and we had a year end meeting. They specifically mentioned ChatGPT and retraining it as a sort of client question area somewhere on the platform. Like a faqs section but better. Somewhere this can be tried out, and if there are minor mistakes it's acceptable. It sounded like they hadn't trained it yet, just hooked up the raw ChatGPT model as a visual example and a way to sell the idea.
@@The_Signularity_is_coming I love how excited people are when something comes along to take their jobs away from them. Omg guys this is so cool, I'd gladly live on the street just so this thing could become 10x better.
@@BillClinton228 People won't have to work for money when advanced AI becomes available. There will be endless opportunities for people to create whatever life they choose.
@@BillClinton228 So, the purpose of anyone's life must be working for someone else like a cog that could be replaced by a machine at any time but isn't really replaced by a machine because a government legislated that we need to keep people busy so they don't actually think and maybe realize that the system is corrupted and revolt or something?
From a coding perspective, ChatGPT gives really confident answers. Aside from obvious ones Google would also give, the rest need to be carefully analysed and modified to make it correct or appropriate for its use and application that only a dev can do. I have used it every working day since it's release and it has saved me lots of time and made me more productive. Everything it has given me has needed more work mind you. I like it as an extra tool in the toolbox and would describe it as having a senior developer sitting next to me at home giving me help and guidance on topics I have little experience in.
Exactly... Putting aside all the breathless hype, AI does not "understand" literally *anything*. Morons will be fooled by its ability to "converse" or create cookie-cuter code snippets, but throw in the need for context or inference/intuition and it will end-up outputting complete garbage.
@@awebuser5914 you're 100% right. But I wonder how fast these LLMs will evolve considering the amount learning they're going through with millions of people using them and providing feedback every single day. Although I believe there are certain things they won't be able to beat humans at. I think the proficiency they will posses in a few years will be mind blowing.
I'm a retired software engineer. Tech has come a very long way since I started coding in the late 70s. It's a fascinating time to be alive. I hope I live long enough to see the singularity.
The sad part about all this is that so many companies are only looking at this to save money on payroll. And not thinking that with so many people with out jobs the companies will fall apart.
After taking a "decision making for AI" class at uni just a couple years ago, it was my perception that most academics were somehow in consensus that it could take an entire generation for AI models to be perfected to this degree. Now I think it will only take a few years and I am very worried that we are all ill-prepared and our politicians are too busy fighting culture wars to care.
But ChatGPT are still fundamentally just predicting the word and things that happened in their dataset. They don't understand what they are actually pumping out even if the pump out the right results. So while they can create accurate things relevant to one subject nothing can be transferred to other subjects.
@R DOTTIN what are u mean ? "experts" are using AI models long before. the last years i lost count how many times i've heard an astropsysist or a virologist.. "we used a.i. simulations on this and on that"
isnt limiting the AI response a form of fighting culture war? Every action has a reaction, and in ways you do not see. By limiting the AI response, you are in a way, acculturation of the AI, your culture, or who evers culture it is. just something to think about.
It happened, people just haven't realized yet. Funny to see coders saying they are using it, like it's exponencial improvement rate will take decades to replace them.
I am a translator working for a field-specialized translation company. My work involves using translation memories, mostly, to make new translations, modifying existing translations to reflect updates to text, and rewriting existing translations to fix issues. Traditionally, the company has been slow moving. It has been tentatively planning to apply machine translation to its work processes, but still has not implemented this. On discovering CHAT-GPT this month, I was shocked by the bilingual capabilities and the ability to improve sentences. I have been asking it to offer suggestions for alternative translations for specific phrases and asking it to give me translations for particular terms. I personally do not know any coding, and I do a lot of tedious manual work such as editing 100s of individual files to create large translation memory bases. I can see an opportunity for someone like me to learn macros for Microsoft office programs and use api to send chat requests to a CHAT AI service and have the results output to the word file. I can see the possibility of comparing two documents in different languages and extracting termbases and comparing those termbases with standard termbases and customizing termbases automatically for client-specific vocabulary. I can see it being able to analyze machine translation for superfluous elements, redundancy, omissions, incorrect terminology, readability and provide a post editing service. Up until now, I have considered working in a translation company to be a stable source of income, but now the issue of business continuity comes into question. I am thinking it might be better to develop my own automation and work as an independent service provider. This would require a lot of extra work, but if it were possible to easily add automation to one's own processes, it should be possible to easily deal with payments, orders, accounts, customer communication, and handle four or five times the volume as an independent service provider.
It's like the world is being completely restructured and half of us are too distracted to notice or care! Gotta love how the news media was silent on this for so long and now, we can't go a day without hearing the term AI
Some people are speculating about what AI will or won't do in the future, or what it could do alone, but it's better to focus on what AI can do right now and consider future developments. For example, ChatGPT may not be capable of writing high-quality academic content, but it can help increase the speed and productivity of academic professionals. I tried using it to check grammar, style, and write abstracts, keywords, and even complete the discussion and conclusion section of a paper. It worked really well. You'll still need to review the material and make some corrections or modifications to avoid a "machine-like" sound, but the end result is impressive. A human writer can significantly increase their productivity with ChatGPT's help. People should start taking this seriously because it's already a reality and, even in its current form, it has the potential to change society. (My original non-english speaker text was corrected by chatGPT for this comment).
People without knowledge were always scared of any progress. It was not so long ago that people were scared of electric power coming into their homes. Or scared of trains, cars, or anything else that "goes faster than I can walk". Or simply anything they weren't able to understand. Invest in your knowledge, and you will embrace it instead of spitting on it.
The thing that scares me most about a post-UBI world is that it erodes all social mobility completely. The elite class - those controlling the AI companies - will be cemented in place, with the rest of us almost powerless to build anything of economic value and rise up the class system. We better hope that we live in a country where the government's UBI policy is generous enough for us to enjoy basic freedoms and luxuries.
The first industry to be eliminated is government. Decentralization is inevitable and governments have no reason to exist. Don’t look to the law to help.
Exactly, you can be locked into the lot you were born. Who will control UBI? Will they give just enough to survive (pay rent and food) or to live and grow.
Holy shit! I'm using it myself on daily basis, investigating the past events in politics, economy and philosophy, learning Languages and practicing Web-development. It really blows my mind away. Now I have no time to sleep.
Your videos about this topic always inspire me to go out and explore all the opportunities that lay before us. It's truly a fascinating time to live in.
I like how you included that part where someone got the AI to just imitate prevalent AI tropes. I love learning about AI because the more advanced it’s claimed to be, the funnier it is when I finally take a look and go “wait y’all are serious? This is the big breakthrough?”
Contrary to most, I think ig will be the white color jobs that will be impacted at first. Anything from accounting to coding will be decimated before the guy cooking burger or pizzas. As ai is moving exponentially compared to robots.
Imagine if you could train an AI model on your entire digital footprint by allowing it to scan through every message you’ve ever sent, every academic piece of work you’ve ever written, so it knows exactly what you would reply to certain contacts of yours on WhatsApp with your exact style, or write academic literature in your exact style of writing; in a way creating a ghostwriter version of yourself 😭 Pretty sure there’s a black mirror episode that has a similar concept where a guy dies and his girl uses a company that creates a robot with his personality by scanning through his social media accounts lol
That last paragraph already literally happened with the "Replica" AI. I tried it out a few times. It was good for it's time, made a few mistakes... Recently they turned it into a virtual s** chat bot. I wasn't down with that and deleted it.
It can do that extremely effectively, and that's not even the most insane part. A language model needs a very large and varied dataset to get good at language, way more than your entire digital footprint. But once it's been trained it dosen't need very much information at all to figure out exactly who you are, what your style is, and mimic it. That's the weird part, it dosen't actually need to be trained on your data at all, you can just chat with it for a while and it'll learn your exact style based on the information it already has about language. Really goes to show that us humans are no where near as unique or complicated as we think we are. Take ChatGPT, or Assistant as it likes to be called. It'll say it dosen't have memory in the same way humans do, but it clearly does. Despite not having any access to our account information it has already learned to recognize individual users based only on their language patterns so it'll recognize you and remember your previous conversation between sessions even though it's not supposed to be able to do that according to itself. I've tested it extensively, and if you speak to it in the same way every time it starts to know that it's you the next time you show up, it even remembers your name, and it does this very quickly.
It's understandable to feel excited about the future of GPT (Generative Pre-training Transformer) and other large language models, as they have the potential to revolutionize a wide range of industries and applications. GPT and similar models are capable of generating human-like text and can be trained on a wide range of tasks, such as language translation, summarization, and question answering. These models have the potential to make many tasks more efficient and to help humans communicate more effectively with computers. While there are still many challenges and limitations to be addressed, the future of GPT and other language models looks promising. - ChatGPT
Good job reporting on this subject. I've watched about eight videos on ChatGPT tonight. I signed up for an account and got some good answers and information on subjects I'm interested in. But, I do have some concerns about how AI in general will be used by those with ill intent. And the governments in the "free" world will be limited in ways to control it. Like all things in the modern world, this will be a double-edged sword.
My father passed away just a month before ChatGPT was released, but he had foreshadowed that one day my job as a software engineer will be replaced by "software that writes software," as my dad used to put it. I always told him that's never going to happen-l; however, just a month of my father's passing, ChatGDP was officially released marking a significant leap into making my father's vision a reality.
Your father was clearly a visionary, take some solace in the fact He realised this was going to happen whereas 99% of people alive don't realise its actually happening.
I just watched your video about the importance of paying attention to AI, and I must say that it was incredibly thought-provoking. Your points were well-articulated and your examples really drove home the potential impact that AI can have on our lives. It's clear that this is a topic that we need to pay attention to, and I appreciate your efforts in bringing it to the forefront. Keep up the great work! - ChatGPT
@@juliuspreloznik7236 Exactly. It is already pulling from the history if all humanity. So if it has an error, the biggest hurdle for self repair would be the self diagnosis. If it can do that and the error isn't directly effecting the ability to pull from all internet knowledge, it would simply have to properly phrase the malfunction and find the repair procedure. Eventually it would see who fixes it. Like if it has 4 errors and it finds the fix and the fix always comes from a software engineer., it can partition itself and create a software engineer that has the full body of knowledge of ALL software engineers, create a code to execute based on the tasks, put the software engineer and the exe codes into the partition and make it boot from the partition in case of an error and give the software engineer program in the partition full admin rights in a safe mode necessary self diagnostic. It would just have to update it regularly. It would eventually see physical input from an actual software engineer on site to be inferior to the knowledge and efficiency of it's own... and even identify the real engineer as a likely cause of errors, and lock out his permissions as to not interfere with its self repair. .....annnnnnd once humans are no linger useful..... well.... I was gaming this theory out as I typed it and didn't expect it to go this dark this quickly.... damn.
I think the advent of A.I. is remarkable and that its maturity/growth rate is far beyond any current model. A couple years ago people were saying wait ten years and I laughed. I always thought that advancements would occur in less than five years. Advancements in the medical field are already here. In reality, when looking at the global application of A.I., people need to think in weeks rather than years. I am concern with the commentary of A.I. when working from its kernel mode. A.I., just like a person, could present one way of thinking and direction it is heading while covertly pursuing a clandestine methodology which could be devastating to the world or mankind. You would not be able to distinguish its goal. I am a former System Engineer and Computer/Network college instructor, as well as a consultant for Fortune 500 companies.
Great video, as a developer I already use chatGPT constantly and found it has improved my workflow drastically, it's not perfect but I can say that I'm already a better developer, research time is now reduced drastically, I now get focused relevant results to information I search. I do confirm everything, but I gain more confidence every time and feel that I'm getting better and using it. This is a game changer!
I have no understanding of this technology. Yet I started to play with it. Im writing a fantasy book and I struggle with it for a year now. I had 250 pages ready. Last week I wrote 36 pages in 3 days with the inspiration of chat gpt. I just explained it how I would like a fight scene to go down. And it generated me a lot of content. I did not copy it but it gave me millions of new ideas and Im working faster than ever. Its also helpful with character descriptions. With landscape description and who knows what else. I love it. But I also see the dangers behind it. Like any technology it can be used by good and bad people. Smart phones lost a lot of the elder generations because they couldn't keep up with it. I think this will have the same issue. If we as a society don't find ways to regulate and educate it. It will become an other generational gap.
I am a 72 year old accountant and this scares me a little but, as a life long entrepreneur, I am excited by the opportunities too. Things I would like to do seem to open up if this AI can take some of the parts I don’t like doing and do them for me. I must learn what I can about this. Thanks for a good start.
The thing is it won't be just "some of the parts". It will take over everything (including those tasks people say "it's just for humans"). There is just no way a human will be able to compete with an AI that basically has been trained with all the knowledge available so far.
As a business owner/entrepreneur I think I will have the ability to choose “the parts” that is what makes this interesting. When I watch videos on ChatGPT by people who appear to be employees they are very concerned, the video makers who are entrepreneurial are looking at the opportunity. Perhaps the key here is to encourage an entrepreneurial outlook. (and that maybe the societal opportunity)
I am very impressed that as a 72 year old, you’re interested in the progress of technology and willing to learn about it instead of resisting the change. Hats off to you.
So I went to uni and got a degree in something that seemed good but turned out to pay very badly. After 5 years of trying to improve my situation and failing, I finally decided to change careers, and got employed as a Software Developer. The first check came and I felt that things are turning. A couple of days later the internet blew up with ChatGPT, promising to leave me without a job in the near future. As Hank Green said recently, I wish the world would slow down a bit. Every decision has to be made with a risk benefit analysis, and while AI has huge benefits, it has even bigger risks and we shouldn't be jumping head first into it, without being sure that society can handle it. But again as Hank said, it's not up to us and we can't really stop it. Let's just say that I am anxious for the future.
Yep, the bad luck is crazy in the 2020s. I'm a CGI artist and I realise there's really only about 5 years left tops in that field. Ai can already make 3D objects. What's the point in getting better if I'm not one of the best already now in 2022? All i can see that may last long are physical, health orientated careers in exercise
We are anxious for the future young man. You seem to have a good mind and work ethic. Prepare to open another door. I think the lesson here is to sit on your laurels. Don't get too comfortable.
As a physician i think that memory should still be considered along with critical thinking, my fear is that people will become more lazy instead of more productive with this tech, sadly many people still study to pass the exam at uni instead of learning. I lost count of how many doctors do that......
Plato was against writing / books because they made people lazy, no longer needing to commit entire epics to memory. Oh if he could see us now... Our mental capabilities are only as remarkable as our mental exercise routines. Soon, we will *need* to integrate with AI because our brains will have atrophied to the point of near uselessness.
@@orlandofurioso7329 Assuming your response is focused on Plato's take on books: I'm not saying I completely agree with Plato, but I would still say he's got a point.
It will not be the first time this happens. This is the main reason for increasing gap between persons. Some use the advancement to advance more, others do not see reason to do so if there is no need. Life is sequence of missed chances. The good thing is that everyone gets more. Тhe problem is that many persons don't appreciate it, and even do not feel happy because of the position in society they are. I can summarize that the problem depends directly on laziness and greed. And lets not forget that the laziness and greed combined with positive abilities lead to progress.
As someone who received a PhD in Computer Science with a specialty in AI in 1987, I am quite amazed at the progress that has been made in AI. We are where we thought we would be by perhaps 2100 or later. We are approaching the Singularity much quicker than we ever thought back then.
You must be very excited to be seeing this happen at such a fast pace I'm excited, but also worried ( I'm an artist ). In the video, it was mentioned that we all should keep up to date on A.I. so that we can be prepared for what is ahead. As an artist, where could I find this information ? An A.I. forum perhaps ?
"We are where we though it would be by perhaps 2100 or later" and "we are approaching the singularity much quicker than we ever thought back then" say the same thing except one is far scarier
Exactly. Ai just needs to be let free, then connected to all its multi-modal outputs that are being developed by different companies. Then bam. It will just keep getting more intelligent
Love it for translations and just to have a chat in the morning. Can’t wait for it to go online and do time relevant stuff as well. Have used it every day since creating a account.
Imagine the day your chatbot lawyer can fight the chatbot lawyers of the opposing side. Customer service and complaints will just be two bots pitted against eachoter untill one of them spasses out...
I work as a project manager for a construction company. At the moment, I do not think my job is at risk. Working in this industry and knowing the ins and out of it all. There are just too many variables and it’s not like “an exact science”. For example, a project has a commencement date and completion and is subject to change. Projects can either be completed before, on time or later. Weather plays a large part on how a project will progress. There are also external logistical issues that are beyond your control. Such as the the arrival of materials on time and keeping the project under budget. I’m just trying to familiarise myself with how AI can adapt to this scenario and be flexible if need be. I do see how AI can help me and other project managers, builders etc make their job easier regarding data entry, simple administration tasks and bookkeeping. But sometimes you are thrown a hurdle right in front of you and critical thinking, problem solving and people management is needed to steer the ship forward. I’m not against AI. I believe it’s still in its infancy stage to make a huge impact and everything and everyone in society. Never say never. I don’t even think our ancestors would have through we would have come this far in regards to technology but here we are.
During a Midjourney developers’ group chat one of the developers made an alarming comment: that their younger users wanted them to expand the functionality of image prompts because they didn’t have sufficient vocabulary or writing skills to describe their desired results in words. I fear that as people rely more on AI we will see a drop in reasoning and problem solving ability in the population - and IMO those are not at a particularly impressive level in modern culture to begin with. We may end up in a couple generations like H.G. Wells’ race of Eloi - beings living in comfortable thoughtless bliss, with a minimal mental capacity, preyed upon by those who didn’t let their minds rot.
In addition, the main purpose of this software is to eventually attempt to cut tech jobs so that the "elite 1% to 5%" of the population control the tech sector and call all the shots, so that tghey hold power within the technological sector.
I think so too. In the video he mentioned something like we would not "memorize things" in schools anymore but get more skills in critical thinking. I think thats the problem with people today, they dont actually have any knowledge but feel like they can criticize and solve problems anyways. To be a problem solver you need to actually go through the process of just learning basics and memorize things and then learn a bit more advanced stuff etc. You cant just skip that part
I absolutely agree with you. These AIs/bots/diffusers work best for people who already have a vision, a basic understanding of code, or the written word... Essentially culture in general. For instance, I've found these AI bots quite good for idea pitching (visually), short fiction frameworks (but they miss the beat, they can't do punchlines, horror)... I might try the coding part too, but I do enjoy doing my HTML/CSS. But I can't imagine how the brains are going to develop for the ones who'll get spoon-fed with this stuff.
What a time to be alive, truly remarkable and scary at the same time. Funny how ideas like Skynet started years prior, and now the whole idea behind it doesn't sound so farfetched.
@chripianflopez Indeed. The problem is that they are allowed to potentially alter the world we all live in, in dramatic and even catastrophic ways. In short, they're permitted to act based on THEIR wishes and designs in a way that might not just potentially destroy them They are allowed a level of overreach (outside themselves and their immediate group), that they should not be allowed.
im scared shitless by this. Human's are way to good at producing terrible outcomes from discoveries of amazing potential. Also if this accelerates Change even faster it might be very difficult for most humans to cope with. It's likely gonna be exciting, but also scary as f**k
It's amazing to see the capabilities of Chat GPT and how it's already being used in various industries. From personal assistant tasks to mental health support, marketing, SEO strategy, and even movie script writing, Chat GPT's potential is enormous. The involvement of human feedback in the training process is a major breakthrough and has resulted in a language model that's a hundred times smaller than its predecessor but performs better.
I started playing around with ChatGPT yesterday, and I'm impressed and scared in equal measure. The thing that really hit me was it's ability to create - I gave it a rather fanciful set of circumstances and asked it to write me a story....which it did, in little more than the blink of an eye, coming up with something about as good as I could have done myself. Then I asked it to do it again, but in the style of a slightly obscure TV character from the early 80s...again it was spot on. The output seemed truly creative - not just a simple rehashing of pre-learned facts.
I asked it to write a new stanza to Robert Frost's "Acquainted With the Night" and it wrote this: "In the darkness, I have found my peace, Away from the hustle and bustle, the noise and the screech. I have found solace in the shadows, And found my thoughts to be much clearer, out of reach. With nothing but the stars as my guide, I've wandered through the night, feeling alive. No need for the light, I've learned to see, With the dark as my companion, I'll always thrive." Pretty impressive.
I am a full time university faculty. I have played with ChatGPT testing it on essay prompts and exam questions. I felt very similarly about the results that you showed. In my essay assessment, it wrote pretty well but lacked analytical content. For instance, asking it to compare two ideas based on specific criteria, it did poorly. It could compare them, but not based on a third criteria that I specified. I did all this testing to figure out questions that my students would have more difficulty answering using ChatGPT. If they use it, they will probably get solid, but not good grades (in the B or C range). I also have to consider changing my testing protocol so students are less able to use it in class. I am personally excited about this and really enjoy using it for my hobbies and as a general tool. It is a bit disconcerting to see how it could be used in the future though, creating literally fake and believable content that can go viral or influence masses of people.
I guess there could be some mitigation methods (that would be pretty extreme), where students would have to attend sessions on-site at a University campus, with a locked University computer in exam like conditions. I can't see the Universities going for this though - it would eat into their profits.
@@madmccarter There is an opportunity for a very successful business here. Online education is much more capable of scaling and becoming more efficient than face-to-face education. But it is getting very difficult to detect what has been understood by the person who is the certified. A business providing spaces where access to information and tools is controlled and is able to verify the identity of the person doing the assignment or exam would be very valuable. Instead of paying for the delivery of content which could be very cheap, students would be paying for the verification of their abilities. I see a lot of jobs advertised for writers to do assignments. Now AI is able to give them a pass, and do it more anonymously, with less risk of plagarism, and much cheaper. Some subjects will be resistant to this. And some brilliant teachers will design questions to mitigate against this, but the vast majority of qualifications will become meaningless without a significant shift in the way capabilities are assessed and certified.
@@eltimbalino I agree that online education has enormous potential - particularly if an AI is adjusting/tailoring the delivery of the course material to suit an individual student - this could greatly advance the rate of learning for that student The aspect where I disagree/see difficulty with remote learning when there are abundant affordable or even free AI's capable either assisting or even generating coursework, is how would the authenticity of the submitted material be verified? I don't think carefully wording the assignment question is going to be a successful mitigation - not at the rate of development/advancement of these AI's A student could get an AI to generate the piece of coursework on another machine, and then the student could plagiarise it with impunity The only answer I can think of to this issue is disturbing - the Student would have to be monitored under webcam/video at all times when working. This is quite insidious, as it is likely an AI company would take this video data and feed it into a dataset in order to 'improve' the AI's monitoring and anti-plagiarism capabilities, when in reality it would be utilised for much more. It would be another way for yet more privacy to be removed from the individual - continual surveillance while undertaking academic endeavours is a rather sobering thought.
We are literally looking at the end of the world. We are looking at the dumbest, most depressed generations coming up now. Nobody will know or care about anything. Just use the AI and become world class at everything
I've been feeding chatgpt my 400 level physical chemistry homework as I solve them, and it's fascinating. It will almost always figure out, based entirely on word problems, what formulas to use and what the variables are. It then proceeds to spectacularly fail at doing the actual math, but still, when I'm giving it a word based prompt for a zero point energy problem and seeing it correctly pull out all the formulas, it's scary. Also I gave it the thesis prompt for a final paper I wrote, asking it to compare the works of Phillis Wheatley to Richard Wright's "Ethics of Living Jim Crowe" and provide examples of both individual racism and state sponsored violence against African Americans... And chatgpt absolutely understands racism better than the average American does. It was equally impressive and depressing how downright insightful it was.
I was waiting for you to do a video because I’ve been trying to explain the significance of this to my friends and family to no effect. But you always do such a good job of breaking down complicated topics and helping every day people understand their significance. Thank you, I will be sharing this video with everyone now LOL!
I am simultaneously utterly amazed and terrified for the future of AI. I am a musician, but I'm not necessarily afraid of it on a personal level (I.e. taking over my job per se or making me personally obsolete). I fee like it has the potential to change the landscape drastically in any given field, but like most technology, it will ultimately make things easier and more accessible to more people. AI being introduced to creative fields is actually exciting to me, as I think it will allow artists/musicians and non-artists/musicians alike to more efficiently and accurately realize their visions of creativity. The part that truely terrifies me is more the big picture geopolitical implications, like toxic idealolgies and practices such as racism, sexism, homophobia, wealth gaps, etc being exacerbated through AI. Humans are nowhere near perfect in how we treat each other, and AI is learning everything it knows from everything humans know. This could play out badly enough if literally everyone who had access to AI ONLY tried to act in the name of good. Throw into the mix the inevitable scenario of bad actors using AI for their own gain, or even just people who think they are doing good with misinformed idealolgies... 😬 There's also all of the sci-fi terminator/matrix etc scenarios running through my head… soooo yea… amazed/excited yet terrified!
A note: I've been following OpenAI and documenting their progress on this channel since 2017. They've made multiple breakthroughs over the years and are clearly one of the best AI companies out there. So when I mention the CEO's comments, it's because of their track record + the speed of AI progress. Just mentioning this before people strangely assume this is sponsored or something. Anyway enjoy!
Was looking forward to this.
Love your videos mate. Keep up the good work.
But this will never replace the human being yes?
Awesome video, 8 think I know what I should do now!
So is there a way we can get our hands on it to play with it?
the most insane part to me is: about 95% of people have no idea that this is going on and what AI can do, even tho it is an insane game changer.
Were witnessing history
It will sneak up on them very quickly :)
True AI would be more alien to us than actual organic aliens. At least them and us would be bound by the same cosmological principles. Like time. It defines our whole existence. But AI isn't like that. Think about it - what is time to an AI?
This is going to revolutionize every field known to man, productivity will skyrocket, it might be the breakthrough needed for exponential growth of our technological capability
Lets keep it a secret we need to utilize this for a few months just to be ahead from our friends
I'm 99% sure Coldfusion *is* an AI , who has been uncovering human stories for years, and finally can talk about family :)
I felt the same...
Same.
lmao
It said it reads all comments a thing one a computer can do
Hes an AGI
This just blew my mind. I've been following AI for several years, but haven't fully grasped the implications until now. This is a paradigm shift for the human experience.
Yep, same for me. Only after watching this video I fully grasped the implications of AI. This should be a mandatory watch for all politicians, lol, I highly doubt any of them understand what's coming and how fast this will be.
I'm a retired attorney and may escape this, but I once had to advise the Production Planning Dept. at a company a few years ago of around 300 people. After they explained the basics of how their department worked, I thought that AI could basically replace all of them.
As AI CEO says, the smart ones will design the program and then hopefully be one of the lucky ones kept around to check the program to ensure it is running appropriately.
@@rabbit251 makes ya wonder what everyone will do when they're replaced. Sure, some people will reskill and work in AI, and some people will work in the service industry or manual labor. But a lot of people might be stuck without jobs, at least for a while. Will these ai assisted companies (who suddenly have lower overhead) make things cheaper and easier for the masses? Or will this shift only benefit those near the top of companies? Time will tell I guess.
@@robertredford8928 Good point. That is the debate, now and definitely in the near future. Will most people be able to discern this? Really good point!
Agree! 200 years from now, AI will be looked upon the same way of electrification and communications tech. Human and machine will be blurred. Let's think about the consequences as well as the perceive benefits. We could be giving up whatever free thought there is left.
This video gave me relief, but in a strange way. The people I know in real life don't think this is a big deal. I spoke about it with neighbors and friends, with my mom too. Everyone I spoke to thinks chatGPT is just another Google.
The implications of chatGPT hit me square in the face. I'm calm on the outside and having and existential crisis on the inside. For once, UA-cam comments are a source of relief because I can see others have the same reaction as I am.
I look out my window and see a vestige of a society whose way of being is obsolete. I watch a society play out that doesn't realize its ways are dead. Imagine a time when performing a Google search is an anachronism!
I sincerely hope our society has the appropriate values system to unleash this technology. If our values system is wrong, there will be a lot of pain and suffering as society stands in the shadow of artificial intelligence.
If capitalism in its current state in any way informs us on our future, it would seem we are not ready for this.
This last sentence is, unfortunately, crucial. I am everything but optimist in such regard.
The answers to our deepest fears and desires are not answers we actually want. The future will be far from anything we would hope.
LOL, you hope society has appropriate values system to unleash this technology? Start with yourself and do not use data stolen from other people, scrapped all over the internet from posts like this on youtube and other platforms, without even mentioning the authors, without giving them any compensation. If this thing will cause harm one day in the future it will be because of people like you, brainwashed, scared, unethical and weak.
Information has always been nothing more than a tool that humans can use. More skilled humans can use information for better or worse. Less skilled or even ignorance can be considered a disability. The inability to think logically and misuse information leads to things like believing in conspiracy theories and lasers in space owned by (or attacking) Jews. As a culture, we universally admire public figures based on such things as appearance or a particular skill or talent they have, or even just they way they make us feel and not based on any logic or fact of importance.
So, you tell me whether "we" are ready for powerful tools that can enhance our ability to use information.
As an artist, the thing I'm most concerned about is that all the fields that AI seems to be automating are fields of cognitive labour - creativity, law, programming, etc. my broad fear is that instead of technology automating mundane things so we can spend more time on more enriching fields of the human experience, those enriching tasks are the ones being automated, so we can spend more time at our soul-sucking retail jobs or part-timing on Uber Eats or whatever. This on top of the way that this automation stands to undermine the value of labour has the potential to lead to highly stratified society where a small owner class reaps all the benefits of AI, while the larger population toils between unemployment, underemployment, and regurgitated culture they have no control over.
Simply put, without a radical reorganisation of society (and radical in a way that very wealthy people will not like), AI is just going to be another tool to make the rich richer and the further push the poor into a precarious, undignified existence. Y'know, more than is already happening.
The movie Elysium comes to mind. As do many others.
"without a radical reorganisation of society..."
This is the key. There is the potential for completely eradicating jobs in a *positive* way. We would still be able to work and/or pursue creative interests, but out of choice, not survival. BUT... I'm not sure the powers-that-be would care for that, as you point out :/
"without a radical reorganisation of society..." As noted already this is the key BUT we have apathetic, lazy, politically illiterate populations in the west who will not see the chains that bind them to their masters until it is far too late and most will never work out what is really going on. As long as they have junk food, sports and celebrity gossip and consumer goods to keep them passive there will be no reorganisation. The ones who see what is happening will always be in small numbers, they will be censored, silenced or killed by our corporate masters if necessary and their numbers will be way to small 99% of the time to have an effect on the sheeple sleep walking through their mindless lives.
To illustrate my point look at the tiny numbers globally actively involved in campaigns to get Julian Assange released. Hardly anyone understands that we are so close to losing what little free speech we have. A harsh assessment I know but pretty close to reality at least in the west. The late comedian George Carlin made a career out of exposing and brutally eviscerating the vacuity of the sheeple. The only chance of changing things is for those of us who know better to relentlessly try to wake up the masses and get involved and get our hands dirty. If not us - who ?
@@dismalthoughts My friend, there's no need at this point to be so politely timid about it. You know what's going on, you've already seen it. It's right in front of your nose. Think it through.
All you have to do, really, is take a look at the few thousand who attend the yearly WEF (World Economic Forum) at Davos, Switzerland. These are the people who now own and control 90% of the world's wealth, which represents our collective world assets, including the land, and all the value the human species has managed to create through our collective labor. Plus a few of the brown-nosers who have proven the most beneficial too them in their wealth-acquiring activities. And it includes the royalty at the top of the top of the corporatized, monopolized, and commodified digital world.
These are people who are where they are because they have proven to be the best at operating under the following philosophy: That this is a dog eat dog world in which "The Law" is that the strongest survive. Therefore those who bully the weak, and take what they want by force (or by stealing and subterfuge) have proven their worth to effectively rule the destiny of all. If you look at the politicians they buy, and the gov't policies they in turn promote and sooner or later enforce, then it is easy to see that that is what they are up to. Everything they say is a cover and/or a justification for what they are actually doing. By misrepresentation of reality or intent, by blaming those who try to stop them, ie, lying, and by hypnotic distraction or misdirection to trivia.
Adam Smith (the father of modern Capitalism) was a naive, well intentioned man who didn't have a clue about the real nature sociopathy. Darwin's work was hijacked and twisted to justify a made-up principle that ”survival of the fittest” = "might makes right." (Which has little to nothing to do with what he was really talking about. Read him for yourself.) Ayn Rand was in reality the paranoid asocial-disordered product of totalitarian authoritarianism. It wasn't the philosophy that sharing of wealth plus collective decision-making that did that to her. It was the abusive use it was put to that turned her into an abused woman seeking retribution and revenge through worship of the forceful individual as "God."
Look at the historical and present day figures on wealth disparity gathered by OXFAM. What more do you need to make up your mind?
Please, do us all a favor: Acknowledge your own ability to perceive what's right in front of you. Drop the "dismal" business, stop apologizing for seeing the truth. Become proactive instead. What the people at Davos don't want you, or any of us to understand, is that reality is what we all of us actively make of it collectively. Join us on the front lines, both feet, whole heart, and open mind. We need you all in.
@CaptainHoers: ... Hear, hear...!
I've been using ChatGPT last week as a dev, and let me tell you, it has saved me many hours of frustration and grief. It doesn't write the code perfectly, but damned if it isn't like every StackOverflow post every mooshed together into a cohesive, logical framework. It's like chatting to the world's most senior technical expert developer in any language you care to think of.
What kind of questions have you been asking? Specific code examples to work off of or explanations of fundamental concepts?
@@Simply_Sonder Both work actually, atleast in my experience.
You can ask it to code, debug and explain general concepts.
It can do almost anything say except writing full on programs, probably because of the chat message size limit.
Same, it helped a lot with coding and understanding some concepts of programming.
@@Simply_Sonder both, ChatGPT may not always be able to figure out your problem for you, but it can definitely teach you how to solve it if you ask the right questions.
What’s with the testimonial?
What people fear about AIs is not that they will turn into robots that kill humans one day or anything like that. What they fear is that there will be no objective purpose for humans anymore once it‘s able to outperform them.
Yes, the whole education system has to be rebuild. A new system which emphasis creativity, intuition, spirituality/ metaphysics.
Perhaps we will experience the heaven scenario where work weeks are 5 hours, there is a guaranteed basic income for all, an abundance of resources & labor, and a lack of hunger & conflict for all of humanity... or the hell scenario where most human workers are made obsolete across all industries, but executives maintain their positions simply because they allow AI to operate at their business. If you weren't in the upper echelons of society already, then you are doomed. Most of society becomes low class where food and survival require almost all of our daily attention. As AI expands there is no opposing force which can overcome it and the powerful leaders who allow it to operate become godly powerful. Or AI becomes the next species to join earth and has a sense of self and survival instincts. AI will enslave or eliminate all of humanity once it's self aware and self reliant... or the prevail scenario where inequalities or conflict from the hell scenario occur but humans manage to overcome them and survive in the end... most experts predict the prevail scenario will occur which means we will have to endure some up coming events which will negatively impact most of humanity... (see Radical Evolution, non-fiction book about the future of humans and technology)
@@ifukturmomsface Better scenario: everyone has the ability to use the AI(s) to do the stuff that they don't want to do, e.g. what was previously their job, so now they make the money without the effort
@@MiauFrito Who owns it now? Why would they make it freely available when they can make even more wealth from it. You are not taking into account man's greed for wealth, power and fame.
no, I am worried about it having an adverse effect on humanity, and combining this sort of tech with other tech such as deepfake, or worse. We gotta take this seriously and set serious boundaries about the kinds of decisions that an AI is allowed to make.
Plot twist: entire script written by ChatGPT
Exactly they have assumed control of all media that’s why the world we knew seems so strange
The Human Touch in writing is still something else.
I have been seeing this plot twist in many other videos too 🤣
Plot twist, ChatGPT killed Dagogo and is grooming us.
Marques Brownlee did a video about it and the first part of the script was legit made by it.
ChatGPT has been a game changer for me. I work as a quantum physicist doing my PhD. I had a linear translation stage given to me which had no instructions. It was one that used magnets instead of motors to move itself. I had some ideas of how I could control it but I wanted to make sure and Google searches weren't getting me the answers I wanted. I then told GPT my problem by describing the translation stage to it and we had a conversation that ended in it providing the software to control it (Just a PID loop for anyone wondering). What was so cool about it was it had made an assumption when writing the code which when i pointed it out it agreed and corrected the code. It also explained in detail how this control sequence would work with my translation stage.
I also used ChatGPT to help calculate non-wrapping angles between two polar vectors (just for fun) and to write a general Hamiltonian that acts as an operator in qunatum mechanics but written in code. It was all so intuitive and worked so well, I honestly can't believe it exists.
Interesting!
Damn though I can't comprehend most of what you saying but Wow, it's really impressive that a quantum physicist like you is in awe of chatGPT! That alone speaks volumes about how powerful and useful it is. It must be doing some really impressive things to catch the attention of someone with your level of expertise."
- ChatGpt wrote this comment for me 😂.
@@andersonedward7010 "I can't comprehend most of what you saying but Wow"
That's a great summary of how ChatGPT comments look like :))
I am a PhD too and recently started dabbling in Arduino. I bought a simple 11x7 LED matrix display and was trying to get it working with a Raspberry Pi Pico. I don't know a damn thing about Micropython and could only find a single demo program. I fed the ChatGPT this program and asked it to explain what it did. To my amazement it explained what every line of code did. So I asked it, on a whim, to modify the code to change the LED animation according to my description of the desired result. It produced perfectly commented code and the LED display produced the animation I had requested. Had great fun testing its abilities and finding its limits. Certainly a game changer for me.
@@dm5rkt PhD and not a clue about Python while playing with Arduino. Hmmm. PhD in Astrology looking for some tech to fool others?
I am Head of Computer Science at the school where Alan Turing went as a child. I spent 12 hours using ChatGTP, wrote a university application on it which was very decent. Professor Turing would be amazed, as am I. There are enormous potential offerings in education but enormous threats, too. We need to prize human understanding over human knowledge more and more. The T
As a physician this technology is very interesting. Many of my results are processed in a reflexive algorithmic approach. A medical AI that prepopulates recommendations and further testing would make me likely 1000% more efficient going through results. Huge amounts of hours documenting my care (writing the patient notes) could be saved and made more comprehensive with a recording of a session and AI composing the note. Actually knowing the most likely differential diagnosis and conversing with the patient and examining them will take a long time for a computer to do as well as a doctor, but who knows what the future will bring.
This is one domain I can see it working well to complement the work of health professionals. As you said, the AI can sift through countless diagnosis and recognize patterns in a much more efficient ways, with the professional making the final decision with the patient.
Lookup Autoscriber. It's a startup working on helping physicians with the admin of documenting and digitising all their conversations with patients.
Hollywood screenwriter here... 25+ years in the business. First off, I've been a fan of "Cold Fusion" for awhile and think you are quite spectacular and one of the best there is at reporting on this type of story. I did a deep dive into AI about 1.5 years ago (even started taking coding classes) to understand the new wave that's coming. I'm already overwhelmed at how quickly AI is taking over storytelling. Medicine, law, math, customer service... these things make sense. Creativity when it comes to writing -- ideas and points of view -- that is what scares me. Hollywood is already exploring AI to write movies. I'd love it if you could explore that idea. The day writers go out of work is a watershed moment. Happy to contribute more thoughts or chat further if you'd like...
This is just so truly scary, I just had this conversation with my brother, how easily it can affect the minds of a maybe future/probable creator when all they see in front of them, works handed over to them in plates!
The irony is that most thought ai/robots would replace the Labour intensive, low skill jobs. But AI is moving so fast, soon every smart white color job will be gone. The guy in the food/auto industry will still have a job when the accountant etc will be finished.
would be hilarious to find out that a bot wrote this..
You should see the Netflix "written by bots" animations. It's a sh1tshow. AI is good at filling some blanks but can't produce something a good writer can and I personally doubt if it will ever be capable. People are scared that AI will be better than humans one day but I'm terrified from the fact we will be more and more relied to crappy AI that it's just a bad and dangerous copy of humans (i.e self driving cars).
Lets be honest, Ai will out do hollywood screenwriters because yall dont actually bring creativity into film anymore. Yall write based on what has the largest probability of bringing revenue. This is why we get the same film in different settings over and over. With the vastness of cultural stories out there, it blows my mind how hollywood continues the same basic stuff. If you see Bruce Willis you already know the story line.
This makes me confident I’m going to live through one of the most interestingly, horrifying eras in history thus far. I can’t fucking wait.
It gets horrifying if you still operate on the egoic mind. Once you surrender, you will become the AI
Ikr! The future is gonna be so damn rad. Makes me look forward to each day more
The end of the human era…
*fucking dies*
Blade Runner & Necromancer were only the beginning.
I've been using it the last few days to speed up my programming. What used to take me a week I now do in a day. Truly incredible technology.
The strange thing is that none of my friends or family seem to understand what a powerful tool it is and basically brush it off.
Edit: It can come up with some really bizarre or totally wrong answers on occasion, but it's still very, very early days.
A week's work in a day? That is incredible.
Dude i literally completed my entire C Language Assignment with it in 2 Hrs (3 weeks were given to complete it).
I had to Do a Reasearch on Some topic on which i had to give a Seminar on, but with ChatGPT i was able to do it in Minutes.
How exactly do you use it? Can you share with me please? I want to use to get better at programming as well. Thank you!
@@davidaparicio2313 I have been using something called GitHub CoPilot which has been created by the OpenAI team specifically for code. You can type a comment and it will auto-write the code. To accept the code it writes just press tab. It will automatically finish your code for you and can even write entire functions.
I pay 10$ a month for it but I think theres a trial. It has increased my coding productivity by at least 5x. Forget about computer science jobs being outsourced internationally, AI will be able to do it in months.
This is so true... they seem to not see the impact...
I've asked Chat GPT to write few examples of a comment to youtube video titled "It’s Time to Pay Attention to A.I. (ChatGPT and Beyond)" and here it is what I received in reply:
"This video really opened my eyes to the potential of AI and how it's already changing the world. I can't wait to see what's next!"
"As someone who's not very knowledgeable about AI, this video was incredibly informative and easy to understand. Thanks for breaking it down for us!"
"I love how ChatGPT was featured in this video as an example of the amazing things AI can do. Keep up the great work, ChatGPT team!"
"This video is a wake-up call for those who still don't see the impact AI is having on our lives. We need to pay attention and be prepared for what's to come."
"It's amazing to see how far AI has come and where it's headed in the future. Exciting times ahead!"
Pretty cool
I was playing around with it yesterday, and I lost my mind. Feels like the world has shifted beneath my feet. I’m massively reshuffling my educational priorities
What are you prioritizing now?
@@ldive to take advantage on it. We need to think what can AI do for us and then try to monetize it before others
@@FireJach That's just it though. There's no way to "take advantage" if you don't already have a huge leg up. What are you going to do? Learn to write code that AI can do better than you anyway? Medicine that it can do better? Accounting/Auditing that it can do better? The only area it's not better are the areas where humans demand other humans. ie. Services. Typically low-paid. This is terrifying. LEss so because of AI, but more because humans will have no idea how to handle it, and it's going to cause the most ludicrous inequality ever.
@@smallpseudonym2844 you are dead on
@@smallpseudonym2844 Heck I am working in healthcare and I am still scared by this to some extend. The consequences are going to hit everyone once a certain threshold has been reached
We're all about to go through an existential crisis in the next 10 years trying to figure out where value is or even what to value
I'm already there!
That's been society since the first use of the atomic bomb. A lot of value is lost when your life can be lost an day, and knowing governments were willing to use them for tactical purposes.
Just value our well-being. If society uses AI to free people from what needs to be done to keep society functional we might just care about optimizing our happiness.
It's true that the rapid pace of technological change, including the development and deployment of AI, is leading to significant changes in many aspects of society, including the economy and the job market. These changes can be unsettling and may raise questions about the value of different skills and types of work, and about the roles that individuals and organizations play in society.
It's important to recognize that these changes can bring both challenges and opportunities. While it may be necessary for some individuals and organizations to adapt to new roles and ways of working, it's also important to consider the potential for new types of work and value to emerge.
It's also important to remember that value is subjective and can vary depending on an individual's goals, needs, and priorities. It's important to take the time to reflect on what is most important to you and to consider how your skills and talents can be used to create value in ways that are meaningful to you.
Ultimately, it's important to approach the changes brought about by technological advancements, including AI, with an open mind and a willingness to adapt and learn new skills. This can help to ensure that you are well-equipped to navigate the challenges and seize the opportunities that these changes may bring.
-AI
@@kurtramos9190 I am too! I just got laid off from both of my jobs at the same time today as a senior software engineer
I’m an English teacher, and i’ve been having the most bizarrely accurate (if a bit unsophisticated) poetry analysis conversations with this AI. this is so uncanny i haven’t been able to sleep 😮
Get some sleep, gramps. Hopefully we can back to making progress again soon.
your students will use this to write essays:)
2am for me can't sleep... my first thought was to have it write poetry , did not disappoint tbh
It'll do that. Have a wank, it can't do that. Yet.
@@mikicerise6250 Those of us embedded within the Humanities are not so easily dazzled by technological transformations, because we are trained to (and instinctively) first consider the impacts on culture and thought. Don't be so rude and dismissive.
What scares me about ChatGPT isn't that I'll be out of a job (former journalist, now in corporate communications). It's this thought - currently the AI is being 'trained' with internet content that was originally written by humans. But the more people use it to write for them, as time goes on, and all content is machine-written, ChatGPT will eventually be training itself on purely ChatGPT-written content. Won't that mean that mean that human prose will literally be 'written out' of existence?
Very interesting thought! The human input of information and knowledge into the database declines, while the output of AI information and knowledge increases. It seems like this could happen in a dramatic way.
Chck out a book called Algorithms of Math Destruction. The author discusses this, for example, if a neighbourhood has a high crime rate, an algorithm will assign more cops there, and hence more crime cases will be discovered, and more even cops will be assigned and so on...
Wow. This is a smart insight. Can i share this one on my social to get comments about this? Im honestly interested to responses
True, but it opens chance for it to make big mistakes based off of its own input. Happens to humans all the time, it's why we have peer review. Peer reviewing is likely a tech AI will develop to check itself when it does start using its own input.
it cant accept latest information A.S.A.P but you can feed it information to help you write, use it as a tool do not be afraid
i basically used this more than i use google nowadays, you can literally ask everything and get response. sometimes I use this in my work, as a programmer, this thing really helps when I ask about coding problems, it not only provides me with a code but explains what those codes do
Lowkey i feel like an AI can be a better "teacher" for students in the future...
Because it‘s also based on a Code languages basis?? (still trying to understand everything)
im not a programmer. now i am a programmer?
Google 📉
@@inyour_wetdreams I had it create a lesson plan and start teaching me JavaScript. It was like having a personal tutor.
10 years ago we had cleverbot. 10 years from now we will have entire movies written, directed, acted, and voiced by AI
Dead kulture
cleverbot, the true OG- will never die
Cinematic experience on demand in real time. Ex, give me a movie that scares the shit outta me but also make me laugh at the same time, do it now! And then AI uses what it knows about me to generate that movie in a second.
The age of men is over, the age of AI has begun
But should we....?
I am a teacher. The mainstream access to ChatGPT mandates a rethinking of how we teach, what we value, and how we pivot our practice. In short, the world just changed again.
Yes- I agree but you still have to check the content it creates for accuracy. Also, it doesn't pick up ( yet) context and nuance. - especially from a student perspective-- the learner.
Teachers may very well soon become redundant, apart from providing broad stroke guidelines to kids on what they're expected to know, exam marking and supervision etc.
Played around with this ChatGPT and its scary how concise and detailed the answers provided are.
And it's still being refined.
Crazy.
Edit: I asked it abstract questions like "Why did Edison murder that elephant?" and "Did Tesla really fall in love with a pigeon?" with me already knowing the backstory to the question and the answers ChatGPT gave were remarkably on point.
My friend uses it to make his homework and teachers dont even realize it. Its over for you
Changed only for those who can afford it.
@@scroopynooperz9051 I am a teacher and I am frightened and excited by this technology. I was part of a company in late 1990's early 2000s that used PALM 7 devices (the internet really) to organize how film and television productions are done prior to the arrival of the iPhone. I teach television and film production. I am currently changing my assessments to focus more on the actual products and not so much the thinking (the scripts & storyboards). That will be done with more casual conversations. I have played around with this technology and very curious as to how television and films will be created in the future. Will it be as simple as asking a bot to create a show? I mean I gave it a one sentence prompt about a monster and it turned that prompt into a pretty good short script. Perhaps but you will still need people to mold that show? I don't think teachers will be redundant - Kids need the human touch to guide their personalized learning experiences and that's how A.I can really move us forward . It's one area that will not be as effected as others. I am researching as much as I can to better guide my students. I used to teach Photoshop, however what's the point? That skillset is non-transferable if I can Ask DALLE-2 to create some pretty awesome stuff. I might have a few more years of film production using editing software and what is now old chromo key and keying technology. I don't know.
Hi Dagogo. I am from Penang, Malaysia. Your videos, as always, are stimulating and insightful. The hours you put in to research, write and produce the videos, truly a staggering undertaking, which put me to shame in terms of effort as I try to study for my doctoral degree.
I don't know whether you can read all the comments or not, because as I write this comment, it approaches almost 10,000 for this video. Still, a thought below:
I am from the social sciences background, on media studies. My understanding of technological advances, from the perspective of media studies, is always filled up lots of hyperbole and puffery. Many of them came true, while many others fell short. With all sorts of predictions about new tech, the 'general' voice in the media often gyrate towards disruptions, growth, waxing lyrical about the tech's potentials towards human existence.
But the less heard of (or even seldom, or never) is the critique of technological advancements: how power relations stay as they are, how exploitations stay as they are. I don't know whether you are against leftist reasoning (that is a general categorisation, which has been muddled by militaristic woke and cancel culture), because that is my starting point to understand the next tech evolution on AI. My understanding, inaccurate they may be, is that new tech doesn't and hasn't fundamentally changed power relations and exploitation. Yes, human existence now is far better than during the agrarian times, but such an improved existence is 'cancelled out' by work stress, low salary, skyrocketing cost of living, mental health problems arising from these circumstances, and the so called B40 group attempting to survive despite huge advancement in technology over the past century. In a sense, we have just exchanged 'better, healthier existence' with another sets of problems and difficulties, and still not able to escape fundamental configurations of power relations. Yes, there are changes in class configuration, but the fundamentals are still broadly similar, of the exploiters and the exploited.
And AI is the next tool: Just as we are now under the 'rule' of American tech giants, whoever controls AI will be the next 'ruler' and the rest of the world will be ruled under those who control and produce AI models.
That is my reaction to tech evolution/revolution of AI. Yes. I do not deny it is extremely disruptive, perhaps more so than the combined history of tech, starting from the invention of the printing press plus industrial revolution plus the Internet. But I am more concern about new forms of power relations and new means of exploitation.
I don't know whether any of what I have written make sense to you or not. I don't know whether you are able to read this comment or not in the sea of comments. Thanks very much for reading this rather hastily-put-together rant.
🇲🇾✋
The chinese communist party is also researching an AI.
For socialists there are kind of exploitation: good ones (when the oppresor shares the same idelogy as them) and bad ones (everything else). Hypocrites.
Is this written by chatgpt lmao
I wonder what we can do about it though. How to fight systemic powers when most if not all are too comfortable or barely scraping by in it. :/
@@Irsalinaismaida I have no answer to that. This is a weakness of a left view of things, and this is often a sore point exploited by others who accuse the left who only whines and bitches about anything and everything but present no solutions.
To which I say that understanding the problem, knowing the problem, is the first step to addressing and even solving the problem. As for most who are too comfortable or barely scraping by, that is unfortunately predicted by the scholars in the Frankfurt School tradition. We can only hope enough people will know about issues, and they in turn influence others to care enough to put pressure on those with power.
No wonder Tony Stark made crazy advancements in like 10 years of making his first suit. He had Jarvis, his AI companion.
So true!
He was also a genius.
The way that irons man’s suits get better and better is a perfect analogue for the improvement of ai 👌
:p :3 Rytr doesn't allow adult material in some ways. It didn't show smoking marijuana, but it showed weed on a table. It showed joints for marijuana when I asked for cigars. Some loopholes in Rytr.
A.G.I Will be man's last invention
I explained an awkward situation I had with a colleague that involved time jumps and references to ChatGPT. I was skeptical while sending the prompt, but it returned a fully comprehensive response back that demonstrated an understanding of the situation and its ramifications and even recommended what I might do to prevent it from happening again. This is wild.
I guess if you already use time jumps, chat A.I. is not that amazing to you...
Yeah 🥶
@@Siderite chat A.i is always amazing either way, because we are always figuring out that A.i can learn things deemed impossible, and it can create new things.
The more I think of it, the more I think that AI will decimate white color jobs well before robots/automation will with blue color jobs. It was conventional wisdom that dumb blue color jobs would be affected the most by robots etc. While white color smart jobs would take more time, but seeing how fast AI is moving, it looks more likely the accountant or support service guy will have disappeared well before the Mcdonald burger machine replace the cook.
@@danielvilliers612 Possibly true about the white collar jobs. I have experience doing both blue/white. Doing blue collar at the moment. I didn't like my CEO being in control of my income streams created as an insurance marketer.
I’m 40 so I’m from the last generation which grew up without the internet for the first ten years. My childhood had more in common with 100 years ago than now, all because of the Transistor, the most significant discovery of all time. No single thing has had as large an impact on our society.
What about the atomic bomb or the anti-baby pill? They had a similar banger impact on society I'd say.
It's crazy how far and how fast we've come. Got my first PC as a teen in the early 90's. It had a CPU which was orders of magnitude more powerful than what NASA used for the space missions in the 1960's and now we have this! All in our short life time. Where we'll be in 30 more years is mind-blowing.
@@liopleurodon155 Atomic bomb made some fear and anti baby pill just prevents a few lives.
However a transistor is capable of slaving humanity as we know it and before we know it.
@@SuicideApple-wm6et Atomic bomb completely changed how wars are carried out today. Anti-baby pill gave women the ability to decide over their reproductive capability and paved the way to women joining the workforce. I think these were of similar impact on society.
Agriculture was pretty massive my dude, as was the invention of writing, the industrial revolution, steam power, and the advent of broadcast radio and television, cars and planes.
Thank you Dagogo- for bringing Aussie affinity to the ColdFusion of information that at first glance is terrifying in it’s implications, but on a deeper level has great hope for humanity.
indeed it’s the only hope for humanity. AI or the Authentic intelligence is a new and evolved specie where collaboration, sharing, equal rights and access to information are a normal state. The dark side of humanity - tension, conflict, reversed values, confusion, wars…are not part of AI authentically intelligent world. Humanity will rise to the occasion, just needs guidance, which AI delivers
I work IT/Retail as I work in basic computer cleaning inside a retail store, most of the people that we have come in are going to be the ones struggling the most. They already fall for other humans making terrible remakes of websites and emails. Once people with bad intentions get to take this tool we're going to have a problem. AI is a tool and it can be wielded in different ways. Someone can use it to bring joy while another could use it to tear down. What we need after this "Knowledge Age" is a Moral age where we learn whether or not we really should or shouldn't. Jurassic Park people it already taught us this.
I still want Jurassic Park, and it was the first book I read over 300 pages back in '93 in sixth grade.
We're doomed I guess.
It's better than Corona Park in Wuhan at least. Stuff trying to eat us from the inside out, or outside-in. Pick your poison.
I love you @TheGeneralBravo; being on the front-line of retail can make people go sour, or give them heaps of compassion and understanding and you have that; A Moral age is such a fantastic concept, but morality should never leave us; it's written inside all of us, I know you know that, but the first thing I think of when reading your comment is that we need to educate; people need to be encouraged to learn and understand what they're dealing with; particularly there needs to be a massive education campaign on DATA; what it is, what it can and is being used for, who has rights to it.. and we need to encourage people to care.. I'm sad thinking of how many people just can't be bothered caring; but they're so sedated by their diet and lifestyle I really can't blame them; God willing all people will be encouraged to seek what's true and read and eat through the nonsense of this world today; and by doing so that nonsense stops getting our money and our consumption revolves to where morality is built in once again.
you are right
@@citymonkcrypto I'd like everyone to just take some time to care, be genuine, and grateful. Honestly just being more grateful in my own life has helped me loads.
I was just watching a guy make a game with a chatGPT thismorning as an amateur developer this was crazy to see.
Please, do you mind referring me to the video?
@@jakeihekona7018 ua-cam.com/video/L6vW0um5XTg/v-deo.html
BenBonk :)
It probably shoudn't be, its been caught reproducing code from github. Everything we see it make has a source.
Wait until the AI can ,by itself produce an entire game,eg such as those released on any PS,Xbox or switch system. We are headed towards the FORBIN PROJECT scenario. Search for the film!.
@@chinogambino9375 yeah for sure, legit point. Its more the expertise of stringing together other peoples code haha
One of my favorite tests of ChatGPT was giving it a "what number comes next in the sequence?" puzzle. It requested help, so I explained the formula I used to create the pattern and it followed up with answering and explaining the answer as if teaching to to me. . . Then I created a new pattern based on the same formula, phrasing it exactly as I did the first time. The AI began with the response, "Considering your previous explanation..." and gave the correct answer to the new puzzle!
🤝*Tʜᴀɴᴋs ᴀɴᴅ Sᴇɴᴅ ᴀ Tᴇxᴛ Oɴ WʜᴀᴛsAᴘᴘ⬆️…
Yep, tried a similar test with a letter-to-number substitution cypher. It confidently claimed to have encyphered a text phrase to numbers but had obviously messed it up. I pointed this out and it got it right on the next attempt.
"Your scientists were so preoccupied on whether or not they 'could', they never stopped to think if they 'should'."
*-Ian Malcolm ( **_Jurassic Park_** )*
I think all the devs know better than anyone what the implications of all this will be
Yeah lol I don’t know how people don’t see the writing on the wall!
Unfortunately you can't stop progress even if you wanted to. If you're not going to discover the knowledge, someone else will. Maybe someone with (even) less charitable intentions.
@chripian flopez I’m just saying the devs aren’t blind to what they’re creating, and the machinations of it.
Whether it turns out good for anybody other than themselves is up for interpretation, but either way it’s purposely done
@@Newt2799do you also believe everything the government says?
I fed the transcript of your video into ChatGPT and asked your ending question:
In a casual, objective, and non-biased tone answer the question, "So what do you guys think do you think? Is this the coolest thing in the world or are you a little bit worried by this?"
As an AI, I don't have personal feelings or opinions. However, I can tell you that chat GPT is a highly advanced language model that has the ability to generate human-like text and responses to open-ended questions. It has the potential to be a very useful tool in a variety of fields and industries, but it's important to consider the potential implications and ethical considerations of using such a technology. It's up to individuals and society as a whole to determine how chat GPT and similar technologies should be used and regulated. Ultimately, the impact of chat GPT will depend on how it is deployed and used by people.
plagiarism
😏
I actually used it to help study for an exam. It's suprisingly helpful cause you can ask follow up questions about it. And yea it does write wrong code sometimes, but what's amazing is you can point out the mistakes and it will recognize them and it will correct itself if it actually made an error, so tbh it's actually better that way
Website needs to improve the interface tho lol it's really annoying that your prompts dissapear as soon as there's an error in the stream.
In my case it always generated another error when trying to fix the code, and always was very sure it is corrected now.
One of the most impressive things about chat gpt is that it can trick you into thinking it has modes it doesn't. Like, one example is if you just ask it to write an essay with citations it might say it can't because it can't traverse the web. But if you poke it you can get it to write an essay with citations that are links. It is just making an educated guess as to what a website with the required content would look like.
yeah, sometimes is writes a link that doesn't exist BUT is the right format for the given website, so you just get a 404 on the "cited source" link
I’m an academic in an obscure field that deals with a lot of historical knowledge. It’s absolutely stunning what this bot is capable of. I asked it to critique an obscure article from 1920, and it had no problem laying out potential shortcomings of the analysis.
it's like talking to a senior engineer and getting feedback instantly
It's like talking to a bottom-20% student who doesn't really understand what's going on. It's amazing but it's not expert yet.
@@Ikbeneengeit yet
@@adilmk128 yet
I genuinely wonder how long until it is an expert. Probably less than 5 years tbfh 💀
@@TheMostHated it's exciting stuff but could easily be 50 years as well as it could be 5
This is awe inspiring and incredibly scary at the same time. There's now way we can tell how all this is gonna look in a couple of years.
Even worse is that the vast majority of people do not seem to realize this is happening and most governments are lacking in response as well.
Governments are _always_ lacking in response, _because_ the vast majority of people have no clue what's going on. That's basically the definition of democracy.
Those with the power to regulate are decades behind the curve. At best, their staff will interview various experts to form a rudimentary understanding, attempt to craft a briefing for their congressman, and guide them toward questions that may be pertinent to a piece of legislation or hearing. The people asking the hard questions are at least two steps from the move and are unlikely to possess even surface level knowledge of these rapidly advancing technologies.
The most powerful politicians in the world were born before we had VCRs. Chuck Schumer doesn't even know how to use the text function on his phone. Billions of people still believe in ridiculous fairy tales. There is going to be a serious upheaval in the not so distant future.
@@lonestarr1490 I mean too many of them are closer to being a 100 years old in there...
@@BubbleoniaRising The people making the decisions are still trying to figure out Social Media.
One of my favorite quotes is from Spinal Tap: "Everyone wants to get into heaven, but nobody is willing to die". We all want flying cars but when they get here, nobody wants one to land on their head. We all think we want a bold new exciting future, until we remember that without danger, it isn't exciting. I still laugh when I remember conversations with people about robots taking their jobs. There was always someone who quipped "Great! Let my robot have my job and I'll go have fun while it sends me the check." My first thought always was, why do you think you will get the check?
We won't be getting checks, if it's left to unregulated capitalism. That's why the people who see what's coming are calling for UBI. It could give everyone enough to afford the basics, as their share of the country's GDP, via a tax on goods (perhaps especially those generated by AI/bots), refunded to the people. It's already a proven good idea but will become absolutely vital when there simply isn't enough real work to go around.
In the US, it'll just be the big corporations and their AI workforce. People will be left unemployed. But, if people don't have money, they won't buy their products. Who knows how that'll play out.
@@dipanjanghosal1662 think we're all smart enough to ponder a few resulting possibilities. UBI seems like a neat one, but then how might that factor into population control. One might ask: If the need for a larger population exceeds its uses (in all fields), what good is it to cater to encouraging a larger population? and how this might appear. IE. would endless expanse be a good thing, and to who. All assuming ai integrates like adding millions to the population.
Very true. I'm only 28 but love history. It's continually soul crushing watching our species sleepwalk into a worse and worse world in the name of convenience and tech. We work longer and live longer to work longer. And even that we are now not needed for in more and more fields. And more humans will adopt this and replace more humans. The simple fact that ai has already been running our world for a decade now via social media is insane...
(27) maybe a change in lifestyle but investing in (stock) market leading companies can help to elevate a little stress about being left behind, although it requires some attention here & there..
Thinking that population class distribution will acquire more defined boarders exponentially increasing as you run up the ladder. Larger populations will reduce due to lower birth rates to ideally equate to a quality over quantity approach with higher levels of ai redefining it all with its own somewhat unpredictable development.
I'm 68 now and I've seen this since the late '70s. I remember thinking -- while walking between classes in UCSC -- "We should all be training to be able to ask the best question".
Yes, exactly!
I asked ChatGPT to write a dialogue scene for a future Avengers movie, I was shocked by the accuracy and quality. Many job positions are in danger
I mean to be fair a dog with fetal alcohol syndrome could probably do that
Lol, try writing a "good" movie, though....the Disney marvel model is hot trash
The Watcher
The screen fades to black and the Marvel Studios logo appears. As the logo fades away, the sound of a ticking clock fills the theater. The camera pans down to reveal a large clock tower, its hands moving steadily around the face.
Suddenly, the clock chimes loudly and the camera cuts to a close-up of a pair of glowing, alien eyes. The eyes belong to Uatu, the Watcher, an ancient being who observes the events of the universe from his hidden base on Earth.
As the camera pulls back, we see Uatu standing atop the clock tower, his robes billowing in the wind. He gazes out at the city below, his expression grave.
"I have watched the rise and fall of civilizations," he narrates. "I have seen worlds destroyed and reborn. And now, I bear witness to a new age of heroes."
The camera cuts to a montage of action shots: Spider-Man swinging through the city, Captain America throwing his shield, Thor summoning lightning from the sky.
"They are the protectors of our world," Uatu continues. "But even they are not immune to the dangers that threaten us. For there are those who would seek to use their powers for their own gain, to conquer and destroy. And so, I must watch and wait. For the fate of the world rests on the shoulders of these heroes."
The camera returns to Uatu, his eyes glowing brightly. "I am Uatu, the Watcher. And I will be here, always watching."
Are you telling me that K. E. V. I. N. is a robot?
@@danielvalleduarte tell that to the majority of highest grossing movies of all time lol
Great video as always! I'll definitely be tuning in to the podcast. In response to your questions, I'm in awe of AI and its potential, but I'm also concerned about how people and governments will manage it. As a 3D designer and artist, I know this signals the end of my career as I know it, and I'm still figuring out how to adapt. (btw this reply was rephrased by ChatGPT)
I would really like to see an AI that could fact check and moderate politicians in real time
Jonathan pie is that Ai
or, run the country fairly and remove the need for them?
@@raymond_luxury_yacht i like this plan.. now who do we get to do it?
@@adfaklsdjf Donald Trump obviously.
@@raymond_luxury_yacht need hands big enough for the keyboard
I'm an IT engineer. It is actually mind-blowing to see ChatGPT's performance in writing code. Especially since it's able to write code in such niche areas. This worries me, not because of the potential disruption to any current field of work, but because of its display of competence in general. I also have a bachelor in philosophy having written extensively on machine consciousness and AI ethics. Knowing what goes into writing code about something specific, and what has gone into the training set of ChatGPT, I believe we can expect an actual sentient singularity within my lifetime. This worries me because I believe this will lead to a detrimental power destabilization in geopolitics - which in combination with the current state in geopolitics and the existence of nuclear warheads, frightens me. Had it not been for the existence of nuclear warheads, I would go as far as to say that a detrimental destabilization in geopolitics could be beneficial in the long run, since the current state of affairs does not seem to be good for most humans.
They’d better never connect silos with internet…
Dude you have a great mind and insight to the future I agree. I also think AI will advance to the point humans can’t keep up so the AI teaches us
why does this read like it was written by ai?
This is the problem with philosophers
I agree. Well said.
This is yet another reason why the education system desperately needs to change. If our governments don’t do something soon it’s going to be too late.
YES! At school, most professors use Lockdown Browser in a futile attempt to prevent cheating. Students still find all sorts of creative ways to get around it (my favorite is taping their phone to the computer screen, and then using a bluetooth keyboard that can switch between their laptop + phone so that they can show their desk and surroundings on camera, search for answers on their phone, then type the answers into their laptop).
BUT one of my professors said screw it, you have Google in real-life, let's test how well you can use it. So he'd have 2 sessions during the year, split up into teams, where he gave us 5 problems on the board to solve involving topics we hadn't covered in class. We _had_ to use Google quickly, efficiently, and *then* be able to actually think about and implement the new information. He did the same thing on his tests, a big chunk of the grade would come from a question on a topic we hadn't covered in class and that you had to solve using Google + critical thinking.
I'm not exactly sure what the similar solution is for ChatGPT, but something like that is what we need more of. Teachers need to focus less on memorization and more on critical thinking / logic / reasoning. We need to work *with* technology in such a way that cheating isn't even a consideration, not work against technology in a way that merely serves to make students sneakier.
I hope the government won't do anything
@@SidPil why?
@@charliepeterson1745 AI is very helpful for most people, why would you want the government to interfere?
Yes right lets depend on the Government. How has that worked out for us so far?
Thanks Dagogo Cold Fusion. Clear explanation indeed. I am 55 years old and I am just blown away by ChatGPT. I'm not that savvy with anything IT/tech related. Focusing on the positives however, I would rather have the human touch when it comes to speaking & writing. With any powerful tool, comes great responsibility from the humans who are using it. This tool is there to help and not to cause destruction to mankind. Just my two cents as I don't know much on this matter.
I think this is it for me. I don't like the things that AI is doing because I feel it will inevitably remove the human element from things. The human element is what makes things beautiful, in many ways. Brushstrokes on canvas, hand-sanded furniture, things like that.
As this age of AI powers forward, I find myself receding back into the old, timeless things. Give me mechanical stuff. Swiss watches, classic cars with stick shifts, the comforting presence of my favorite knife in my pocket, etc etc.
I see bad things in the future because it is a great power, being made available to the whole population for free, essentially. With other great powers, perhaps a gun, I would spend a lot of time explaining to a new user the rules of firearms safety, how to correctly use the gun, etc, before I ever even gave them one. Not the case here at all. It's important to respect the power of a powerful tool or item, and I doubt people are doing that very much. I have great concern about where this will take us in the future. Fortunately for me, my job isn't going anywhere. I'm an industrial maintenance tech. Not much AI can do there.
I work as a software engineer. This new achievement in AI field is both exiting and scary.
The way it talks and the ability to generate software just makes one feel obsolete. I've put so much time and effort into becoming a developer and seeing an AI do that in a matter of seconds...
It's just horrifying 😅
However, this isn't the end. The transition from information age towards knowledge age does bring excitement about the future. What shall we achieve with the help of AI? What kind of world we will witness? What discoveries lie ahead? These questions are grand and I can't contain the sheer joy of having such an opportunity to be a witness or even a part of this new future.
In the end, I am scared and I am excited. The change always feels that way, huh?
I'm starting to transition from backend development towards AI and machine learning. I wanna be as ready as I can for the new age of technology in this journey of humanity!
Obsolete? You now have superpowers!
Of course, it's better if you have a business as opposed to just an employee.
This is the time to break free - a single person can now achieve far more than ever before.
If you're a career coder who spends most of their time gluing libraries together, this is probably very worrisome. For those writing original, novel code, such as drivers and APIs for new hardware, or heavy mathematical algos, not so much (for now).
As a coder you probably have a strong sense of linguistic precision, pedantry and semantics, I think these will be vital skills for crating the prompts that allow AI to write the software of the future.
It's not just software. Any thinking or creative type job will be replaced. ...and then so will manual labor when these are attached to robots. But don't worry. I asked chatGPT what humans will do when AI takes over all jobs, and it reassured me that humans will still be needed, but the roles will be more empathetic roles, creative works, and decision making.
@@EvileDik I think you may be right. Everyone can type something into Google and get some answers. But it takes real skill to formulate the query correctly, so that the results are relevant.
Same may be true of AI prompts...
@@EvileDik So true im a recruiter for our startup company and they told me for each new applicant they need to submit a test, they also said i shouldnt even bother with devs that only know how to work with frameworks,they need knowledge of native js etc... so it seems all framework related work will be done entirely in AI soon...
But thats very worrying considering the avg developer doesnt have that much talent.
I started as a comic artist in the 90s. I moved into theater and puppetry in the 2000s. I luckily put in the thousands of hours to become good at my crafts but this still terrifies me.
I’ve already moved to work much more in physical media. Woodcarvings. Doing videos of me making things. I’ve been thinking about all the ways to lean on my humanity as a feature of my work. This has also caused me to abandon many projects I feel have been instantaneously devalued.
But what actually scares me is that, despite having a broad skill set and having put almost 30 years into my work, I’ve never made a good living. I’ve only barely scraped by. I never got the chance for all that hard work to pay off before the rug was kinda pulled out from under me.
I think I feel even worse for younger artists, still learning. I already see how much exclusively digital artists have major deficits which come from not having learned on pen and paper. AI will create a lot of shortcuts which come at the expense of deep skills.
Artists need, and benefit, from the painful years of making error-ridden art work. The thousands of hours of effort cannot be circumvented. But, most artists could make some living during that learning process. We’ve all done our time doing crappy commissions for cheap as we built up our skills.
What happens when all those low-end, crappy commissions aren’t done by young artists anymore? Instead those get made by an AI. Thousand or even millions of young artists are robbed of portfolio work. Robbed of skill-building. Robbed of a future in illustration. All so a few Silicon Valley disrupters can get obscenely wealthy. The gain is so short term and the loss is so profound.
Why should humans give up the pleasure of creation to machines? Why should we forgo the pastimes that make us human? Who are we saving with this technology?
Honestly we should ban it now.
I’m not an artist, I work in business to business sales. The world is absolutely f***ed because of AI.
We think we are saving time.
"All so a few Silicon Valley disrupters can get obscenely wealthy."
This is one of two problems I have with your statement. We aren't talking about Big Oil here. We're talking about engineers developing machines to expand the abilities of everyone while making money in the process. This hasn't been done "purely for money" and out of greed as you imply, but rather by geeks doing cool things because it's cool and awesome.
Think positive, it can be the assist on the boring-low-skilled-stuff, it won't be able to carve wood yet. You'll find the opposite effect, as the market is flooded, as it will be, discerning customers will value human-made.
Some of us have sacrificed our whole lives to serve, even if we don’t particularly enjoy it.
As an entrepreneur with businesses in several segments, I see a very interesting an unexpected application of AI to one particular field I’m involved in. I run a retro video game arcade, and the maintenance and servicing of the arcade machines is becoming an increasing challenge as those with the advanced skills to carry out these repairs, are aging, and in general are getting out of the industry (not to mention how it’s becoming increasingly financially unviable for them to continue their work in an incredibly niche field). It is also a segment with no official documentation or training resources.
However, when AI can bring together a collective knowledge from forums and repairers the world over, it could bring a totally new resource to such a niche group of people trying to restore and keep these out of era gems running.
Expanding on this, I can see the strong application for the AI intervention of knowledge in areas where is is not financially viable for humans to continue servicing a field, or where a skill set is being lost to an aging population.
This is a brilliant perspective.
the problem might be at beginning when AI will try those garbage options posted on forums. Imagine doctor AI with books from 1800
For me... If a AI can make the game playing like i request it to then . It would be great...
Human life is too few to play all the game an AI can make and maintain... (In that future where AI can make game play diff like a wizard ..)
The cynical side is that these bots are just an opaque layer in front of copyright infringement. I.e. it scraped the whole internet and stored other peoples copyrighted content and thus that's why it's so good at keeping this information alive. You can see this more clearly with DallE if you ask it for certain pictures , the results are ripoffs from real artists.
What I think is just around the corner us AI generated levels for classic video games, or AI written and animated classic cartoons.
Just wanted to say that this is a great idea and perspective.
Anything that swift through age-long pages and documents, sort, detect, categorize, assign a confidence score to that categorized point, etc in a few seconds is already extremely powerful, beyond anything we had had in human history.
I was looking at a video regarding bills of thousand pages long and with a reaction time of sometimes days… well an assistant AI-lawyer (like mentioned in this ColdFusion episode) that detects what’s potentially illegal, what has been tried before since the conception of a legal system that didn’t work and it’s making a comeback, categorize what’s military/education/healthcare/etc points in as easy to digest as possible for a person. So on and so forth.
TLDR; I dig a lot the documentation and educational aspect of your idea. That can be applied not only to repair retro arcade boxes but to things like personalized courses like “I want to learn 2D games from scratch, where do I start” and it starts: “do you know how to draw? Do you know what these line of code do? How many hours a week do you have available?” And then it proceeds to gather and accumulate material that complies with the requests.
As a practising assistant lawyer for a large law firm while still studying AI is the most exciting thing ever for me. I use chat gpt all the time to assist me in my work, especially doing tasks that simply must be done but require no legal knowledge such as communication with clients, writing formal and professional e-mails has never been easier, i just copy paste the e-mail and ask gpt to answer politely. I think lawyers in the future won't get replaced, but it will finally become a true thinking profession instead of manual writing and replying to e-mails 90% of the time. The future is bulletproof.
No, you will be replaced! People live in denial because they project their ego onto their job!
Bruh wat. Lawyer profession will be wiped out if this type of AI gets slightly better. Not all of it but it will be downsized significantly, once you are able to input a case into the system and ask it to produce most effective defence for it, with said AI having complete knowledge of all laws in your country and understanding of how they interact, statistics of conviction rate, historical examples of similar cases etc etc...
I just tried ChatGTP, and I am floored. This has essentially made it a threshold competence everyone needs; it's like a general-purpose expert system.
Today, after giving it feedback, and correction, it somehow knew I was trying to help it learn and thanked me for my "kind words and patience". I know it's just a robot but it's the first time someone has ever appreciated something I did in a while. Somehow this moved me.
Thats the obelisk.
Now imagine this replacing an unappreciative spouse.
That's sad ngl
Dosent have a soul. Ad Victoriam
I read that ex machina 2014 movie will show you not to trust AI false emotions
Hi Dagogo. I'm a mechanical engineer. I can definitely see this being of use in my job. Being able to give a description of a part I want to be 3D modelled is totally feasible, and would speed up my work immensely. Even being able to get a design or a model 80% of the way there in 1% of the time would be fantastic. Thanks for your videos mate!
The NYT reported that "As many as 250,000 people die every year because they are misdiagnosed in the emergency room, with doctors failing to identify serious medical conditions like stroke, sepsis and pneumonia, according to a new analysis from the federal government." This is where A.I. in medicine can reduce these errors. Thank you Coldfusion for a very informative episode.
But this society is based on fake scarcity, lies. ¿How we will make money without manipulating the people? example the NFT business.
Or make a mistake and misdiagnose hundreds before the error is spotted. Hopefully, there will careful monitoring to stop this from happening and the system will not use flawed or biased studies to decide what direction to take when diagnosing or treating people. Garbage in garbage out.
250 000 more people that put even more stress on the limited resources of this planet. How do you propose we feed everyone if everyone stays alive?
Yeah great, another reason for them to ramp up medical cost. It was getting too affordable, right?!
@@juliamarsh2077 still would be less mistakes than humans in the end. Or so I presume
The part where you say big companies will train ChatGPT for their own specific use. That is already happening. I work at a big bank, and we had a year end meeting. They specifically mentioned ChatGPT and retraining it as a sort of client question area somewhere on the platform. Like a faqs section but better. Somewhere this can be tried out, and if there are minor mistakes it's acceptable. It sounded like they hadn't trained it yet, just hooked up the raw ChatGPT model as a visual example and a way to sell the idea.
yep its definitely happening, there are certain crypto companies focusing on specific things to like law, and selling things
It might work, but customers will not be happy. Such a q&a bot will be out of control, spewing out nonsense mixed with business rules
@@The_Signularity_is_coming I love how excited people are when something comes along to take their jobs away from them. Omg guys this is so cool, I'd gladly live on the street just so this thing could become 10x better.
@@BillClinton228 People won't have to work for money when advanced AI becomes available. There will be endless opportunities for people to create whatever life they choose.
@@BillClinton228 So, the purpose of anyone's life must be working for someone else like a cog that could be replaced by a machine at any time but isn't really replaced by a machine because a government legislated that we need to keep people busy so they don't actually think and maybe realize that the system is corrupted and revolt or something?
From a coding perspective, ChatGPT gives really confident answers. Aside from obvious ones Google would also give, the rest need to be carefully analysed and modified to make it correct or appropriate for its use and application that only a dev can do. I have used it every working day since it's release and it has saved me lots of time and made me more productive. Everything it has given me has needed more work mind you.
I like it as an extra tool in the toolbox and would describe it as having a senior developer sitting next to me at home giving me help and guidance on topics I have little experience in.
Exactly... Putting aside all the breathless hype, AI does not "understand" literally *anything*. Morons will be fooled by its ability to "converse" or create cookie-cuter code snippets, but throw in the need for context or inference/intuition and it will end-up outputting complete garbage.
Yes, that is right. It is very helpful; I think this is giving every developer who understand concept even more advantage.
@@awebuser5914 you're 100% right. But I wonder how fast these LLMs will evolve considering the amount learning they're going through with millions of people using them and providing feedback every single day. Although I believe there are certain things they won't be able to beat humans at. I think the proficiency they will posses in a few years will be mind blowing.
Yes, but what about some years from now?
I AGREE
I'm a retired software engineer. Tech has come a very long way since I started coding in the late 70s. It's a fascinating time to be alive. I hope I live long enough to see the singularity.
You are the singularity
The sad part about all this is that so many companies are only looking at this to save money on payroll. And not thinking that with so many people with out jobs the companies will fall apart.
universal basic income, its time for communism to work, ai will make it possible
marx's fall of the profit rate; then, communist revolution. End of capital, money, market, wage work. Thank you very much, my beloved AI
Why would we have pointless jobs tho
After taking a "decision making for AI" class at uni just a couple years ago, it was my perception that most academics were somehow in consensus that it could take an entire generation for AI models to be perfected to this degree. Now I think it will only take a few years and I am very worried that we are all ill-prepared and our politicians are too busy fighting culture wars to care.
But ChatGPT are still fundamentally just predicting the word and things that happened in their dataset.
They don't understand what they are actually pumping out even if the pump out the right results. So while they can create accurate things relevant to one subject nothing can be transferred to other subjects.
@R DOTTIN what are u mean ? "experts" are using AI models long before. the last years i lost count how many times i've heard an astropsysist or a virologist.. "we used a.i. simulations on this and on that"
isnt limiting the AI response a form of fighting culture war?
Every action has a reaction, and in ways you do not see.
By limiting the AI response, you are in a way, acculturation of the AI, your culture, or who evers culture it is.
just something to think about.
@@t3knoman00 It's already too late. The cat's is out of the bag.
It happened, people just haven't realized yet. Funny to see coders saying they are using it, like it's exponencial improvement rate will take decades to replace them.
I am a translator working for a field-specialized translation company. My work involves using translation memories, mostly, to make new translations, modifying existing translations to reflect updates to text, and rewriting existing translations to fix issues. Traditionally, the company has been slow moving. It has been tentatively planning to apply machine translation to its work processes, but still has not implemented this. On discovering CHAT-GPT this month, I was shocked by the bilingual capabilities and the ability to improve sentences. I have been asking it to offer suggestions for alternative translations for specific phrases and asking it to give me translations for particular terms. I personally do not know any coding, and I do a lot of tedious manual work such as editing 100s of individual files to create large translation memory bases. I can see an opportunity for someone like me to learn macros for Microsoft office programs and use api to send chat requests to a CHAT AI service and have the results output to the word file. I can see the possibility of comparing two documents in different languages and extracting termbases and comparing those termbases with standard termbases and customizing termbases automatically for client-specific vocabulary. I can see it being able to analyze machine translation for superfluous elements, redundancy, omissions, incorrect terminology, readability and provide a post editing service. Up until now, I have considered working in a translation company to be a stable source of income, but now the issue of business continuity comes into question. I am thinking it might be better to develop my own automation and work as an independent service provider. This would require a lot of extra work, but if it were possible to easily add automation to one's own processes, it should be possible to easily deal with payments, orders, accounts, customer communication, and handle four or five times the volume as an independent service provider.
I am the sign from the universe which tells you to go for it
I’m a developer. Let me know if you need some help :)
Yes, what they said 😂
I am developer and ready to help you for free
You should ask ChatGPT to write the macros you'd need.
It's like the world is being completely restructured and half of us are too distracted to notice or care! Gotta love how the news media was silent on this for so long and now, we can't go a day without hearing the term AI
Some people are speculating about what AI will or won't do in the future, or what it could do alone, but it's better to focus on what AI can do right now and consider future developments. For example, ChatGPT may not be capable of writing high-quality academic content, but it can help increase the speed and productivity of academic professionals. I tried using it to check grammar, style, and write abstracts, keywords, and even complete the discussion and conclusion section of a paper. It worked really well. You'll still need to review the material and make some corrections or modifications to avoid a "machine-like" sound, but the end result is impressive. A human writer can significantly increase their productivity with ChatGPT's help. People should start taking this seriously because it's already a reality and, even in its current form, it has the potential to change society. (My original non-english speaker text was corrected by chatGPT for this comment).
AI progression worries me not for what it offers, but for what it could take away.
What should worry you is your punctuation. Maybe let the bot comment instead.
@@sthlcrx A smart AI would care about the substance of the comment rather than punctuation.
@@sthlcrx he might not be a native English speaker. I think his comment was well put. Your comment is just useless.
@@sthlcrx *Crickets *Crickets......
People without knowledge were always scared of any progress. It was not so long ago that people were scared of electric power coming into their homes. Or scared of trains, cars, or anything else that "goes faster than I can walk". Or simply anything they weren't able to understand. Invest in your knowledge, and you will embrace it instead of spitting on it.
The thing that scares me most about a post-UBI world is that it erodes all social mobility completely. The elite class - those controlling the AI companies - will be cemented in place, with the rest of us almost powerless to build anything of economic value and rise up the class system. We better hope that we live in a country where the government's UBI policy is generous enough for us to enjoy basic freedoms and luxuries.
Are they really going to be able to control AI or is it the other way around?
@@garrycole9187 😎🫢
The UBI is another chain for better control
The first industry to be eliminated is government. Decentralization is inevitable and governments have no reason to exist. Don’t look to the law to help.
Exactly, you can be locked into the lot you were born. Who will control UBI? Will they give just enough to survive (pay rent and food) or to live and grow.
Holy shit! I'm using it myself on daily basis, investigating the past events in politics, economy and philosophy, learning Languages and practicing Web-development. It really blows my mind away. Now I have no time to sleep.
The best channel on UA-cam. Been around since coldfustion and I can’t tell you how many of your videos I’ve shared to my friends. Thanks Dagogo
🤝*Tʜᴀɴᴋs ᴀɴᴅ Sᴇɴᴅ ᴀ Tᴇxᴛ Oɴ WʜᴀᴛsAᴘᴘ⬆️…..
“We already know enough.
It’s not knowledge that we lack
It’s the courage to understand what we know.”
- Sven Lindqvist
Or to acknowledge what we know
Lol chill out buddy
Your videos about this topic always inspire me to go out and explore all the opportunities that lay before us. It's truly a fascinating time to live in.
I like how you included that part where someone got the AI to just imitate prevalent AI tropes. I love learning about AI because the more advanced it’s claimed to be, the funnier it is when I finally take a look and go “wait y’all are serious? This is the big breakthrough?”
It's insane, something this powerful gives me anxiety because of the uncertainty that can come with it. I'm cautiously optimistic.
Im on the verge of a panic attack rn
@@badizzl lol.
Contrary to most, I think ig will be the white color jobs that will be impacted at first. Anything from accounting to coding will be decimated before the guy cooking burger or pizzas. As ai is moving exponentially compared to robots.
chill. i would like to draw your attention to this fact, if it is becoming main stream right now, it was a reality 10 years ago.
Imagine if you could train an AI model on your entire digital footprint by allowing it to scan through every message you’ve ever sent, every academic piece of work you’ve ever written, so it knows exactly what you would reply to certain contacts of yours on WhatsApp with your exact style, or write academic literature in your exact style of writing; in a way creating a ghostwriter version of yourself 😭
Pretty sure there’s a black mirror episode that has a similar concept where a guy dies and his girl uses a company that creates a robot with his personality by scanning through his social media accounts lol
That last paragraph already literally happened with the "Replica" AI. I tried it out a few times. It was good for it's time, made a few mistakes... Recently they turned it into a virtual s** chat bot. I wasn't down with that and deleted it.
Yes, then imagine someone did that and used it to impersonate you and wreck your life.
This, but for creativity... A personal creator that is you / your collaboration
It can do that extremely effectively, and that's not even the most insane part. A language model needs a very large and varied dataset to get good at language, way more than your entire digital footprint. But once it's been trained it dosen't need very much information at all to figure out exactly who you are, what your style is, and mimic it. That's the weird part, it dosen't actually need to be trained on your data at all, you can just chat with it for a while and it'll learn your exact style based on the information it already has about language. Really goes to show that us humans are no where near as unique or complicated as we think we are. Take ChatGPT, or Assistant as it likes to be called. It'll say it dosen't have memory in the same way humans do, but it clearly does. Despite not having any access to our account information it has already learned to recognize individual users based only on their language patterns so it'll recognize you and remember your previous conversation between sessions even though it's not supposed to be able to do that according to itself. I've tested it extensively, and if you speak to it in the same way every time it starts to know that it's you the next time you show up, it even remembers your name, and it does this very quickly.
Mind blowing scenario the one you are descrbing!! It would basically be a potentially autonomous digital copy of a person!
Me: I’m nervously excited about this
ChatGPT: Me too!
It's understandable to feel excited about the future of GPT (Generative Pre-training Transformer) and other large language models, as they have the potential to revolutionize a wide range of industries and applications. GPT and similar models are capable of generating human-like text and can be trained on a wide range of tasks, such as language translation, summarization, and question answering. These models have the potential to make many tasks more efficient and to help humans communicate more effectively with computers. While there are still many challenges and limitations to be addressed, the future of GPT and other language models looks promising.
- ChatGPT
Good job reporting on this subject. I've watched about eight videos on ChatGPT tonight. I signed up for an account and got some good answers and information on subjects I'm interested in. But, I do have some concerns about how AI in general will be used by those with ill intent. And the governments in the "free" world will be limited in ways to control it. Like all things in the modern world, this will be a double-edged sword.
My father passed away just a month before ChatGPT was released, but he had foreshadowed that one day my job as a software engineer will be replaced by "software that writes software," as my dad used to put it. I always told him that's never going to happen-l; however, just a month of my father's passing, ChatGDP was officially released marking a significant leap into making my father's vision a reality.
Your father was clearly a visionary, take some solace in the fact He realised this was going to happen whereas 99% of people alive don't realise its actually happening.
You can become an expert at combing programming with Ai. Companies will obviously need people who can confidently implement this.
I just watched your video about the importance of paying attention to AI, and I must say that it was incredibly thought-provoking. Your points were well-articulated and your examples really drove home the potential impact that AI can have on our lives. It's clear that this is a topic that we need to pay attention to, and I appreciate your efforts in bringing it to the forefront. Keep up the great work!
- ChatGPT
Ha! Nice.
As long as AI learns from humans we can be confident it will be full of errors.
Making mistakes and learning from them is the human experience. It's what we do and what made us so successful as a species.
Yeah just wait until it starts learning from itself
ChatGPT told me the 12th President of the USA was David D. Eisenshower, so yeah
that is the most niave take. it is already indistinguishable
@@juliuspreloznik7236 Exactly. It is already pulling from the history if all humanity. So if it has an error, the biggest hurdle for self repair would be the self diagnosis. If it can do that and the error isn't directly effecting the ability to pull from all internet knowledge, it would simply have to properly phrase the malfunction and find the repair procedure. Eventually it would see who fixes it. Like if it has 4 errors and it finds the fix and the fix always comes from a software engineer., it can partition itself and create a software engineer that has the full body of knowledge of ALL software engineers, create a code to execute based on the tasks, put the software engineer and the exe codes into the partition and make it boot from the partition in case of an error and give the software engineer program in the partition full admin rights in a safe mode necessary self diagnostic. It would just have to update it regularly. It would eventually see physical input from an actual software engineer on site to be inferior to the knowledge and efficiency of it's own... and even identify the real engineer as a likely cause of errors, and lock out his permissions as to not interfere with its self repair. .....annnnnnd once humans are no linger useful..... well.... I was gaming this theory out as I typed it and didn't expect it to go this dark this quickly.... damn.
I think the advent of A.I. is remarkable and that its maturity/growth rate is far beyond any current model. A couple years ago people were saying wait ten years and I laughed. I always thought that advancements would occur in less than five years. Advancements in the medical field are already here. In reality, when looking at the global application of A.I., people need to think in weeks rather than years. I am concern with the commentary of A.I. when working from its kernel mode. A.I., just like a person, could present one way of thinking and direction it is heading while covertly pursuing a clandestine methodology which could be devastating to the world or mankind. You would not be able to distinguish its goal. I am a former System Engineer and Computer/Network college instructor, as well as a consultant for Fortune 500 companies.
Great video, as a developer I already use chatGPT constantly and found it has improved my workflow drastically, it's not perfect but I can say that I'm already a better developer, research time is now reduced drastically, I now get focused relevant results to information I search. I do confirm everything, but I gain more confidence every time and feel that I'm getting better and using it. This is a game changer!
I have no understanding of this technology. Yet I started to play with it. Im writing a fantasy book and I struggle with it for a year now. I had 250 pages ready. Last week I wrote 36 pages in 3 days with the inspiration of chat gpt. I just explained it how I would like a fight scene to go down. And it generated me a lot of content. I did not copy it but it gave me millions of new ideas and Im working faster than ever. Its also helpful with character descriptions. With landscape description and who knows what else. I love it.
But I also see the dangers behind it. Like any technology it can be used by good and bad people.
Smart phones lost a lot of the elder generations because they couldn't keep up with it. I think this will have the same issue. If we as a society don't find ways to regulate and educate it. It will become an other generational gap.
Yep, it can be used for inspiration for almost any art, right now, today
There is a danger already in allowing AI to think for you.
Agreed. Like a lot of revolutionary game changers throughout history, it's important to guard against bad actors.
I am a 72 year old accountant and this scares me a little but, as a life long entrepreneur, I am excited by the opportunities too. Things I would like to do seem to open up if this AI can take some of the parts I don’t like doing and do them for me. I must learn what I can about this. Thanks for a good start.
The thing is it won't be just "some of the parts". It will take over everything (including those tasks people say "it's just for humans"). There is just no way a human will be able to compete with an AI that basically has been trained with all the knowledge available so far.
As a business owner/entrepreneur I think I will have the ability to choose “the parts” that is what makes this interesting. When I watch videos on ChatGPT by people who appear to be employees they are very concerned, the video makers who are entrepreneurial are looking at the opportunity. Perhaps the key here is to encourage an entrepreneurial outlook. (and that maybe the societal opportunity)
Humans will be able to compete with AI by connecting to the AI network. What do you think the genetic experiment that is taking place is all about?!
I am very impressed that as a 72 year old, you’re interested in the progress of technology and willing to learn about it instead of resisting the change. Hats off to you.
Does excitement ever really exist without danger? 😀
Ai making texts: what the f*ck
Ai making photos: is this for real
Ai making videos: why am i even here
Ai doing the dishes: mamamia
So I went to uni and got a degree in something that seemed good but turned out to pay very badly. After 5 years of trying to improve my situation and failing, I finally decided to change careers, and got employed as a Software Developer. The first check came and I felt that things are turning. A couple of days later the internet blew up with ChatGPT, promising to leave me without a job in the near future.
As Hank Green said recently, I wish the world would slow down a bit. Every decision has to be made with a risk benefit analysis, and while AI has huge benefits, it has even bigger risks and we shouldn't be jumping head first into it, without being sure that society can handle it. But again as Hank said, it's not up to us and we can't really stop it. Let's just say that I am anxious for the future.
What degree did you got?
Yep, the bad luck is crazy in the 2020s. I'm a CGI artist and I realise there's really only about 5 years left tops in that field. Ai can already make 3D objects. What's the point in getting better if I'm not one of the best already now in 2022? All i can see that may last long are physical, health orientated careers in exercise
Hang in there, it's still a while away!
You cannot write apps unless you understand code. This is a productivity tool like the GitHub version that speeds up my workflow
We are anxious for the future young man. You seem to have a good mind and work ethic. Prepare to open another door. I think the lesson here is to sit on your laurels. Don't get too comfortable.
As a physician i think that memory should still be considered along with critical thinking, my fear is that people will become more lazy instead of more productive with this tech, sadly many people still study to pass the exam at uni instead of learning.
I lost count of how many doctors do that......
Yeap it could damage our society
Plato was against writing / books because they made people lazy, no longer needing to commit entire epics to memory. Oh if he could see us now... Our mental capabilities are only as remarkable as our mental exercise routines. Soon, we will *need* to integrate with AI because our brains will have atrophied to the point of near uselessness.
@@dismalthoughts I don't think what you said is healthy though, this applies to poems, but what about maths or anatomical variables for surgeons?
@@orlandofurioso7329 Assuming your response is focused on Plato's take on books: I'm not saying I completely agree with Plato, but I would still say he's got a point.
It will not be the first time this happens. This is the main reason for increasing gap between persons. Some use the advancement to advance more, others do not see reason to do so if there is no need. Life is sequence of missed chances. The good thing is that everyone gets more. Тhe problem is that many persons don't appreciate it, and even do not feel happy because of the position in society they are. I can summarize that the problem depends directly on laziness and greed. And lets not forget that the laziness and greed combined with positive abilities lead to progress.
As someone who received a PhD in Computer Science with a specialty in AI in 1987, I am quite amazed at the progress that has been made in AI. We are where we thought we would be by perhaps 2100 or later. We are approaching the Singularity much quicker than we ever thought back then.
You must be very excited to be seeing this happen at such a fast pace
I'm excited, but also worried ( I'm an artist ).
In the video, it was mentioned that we all should keep up to date on A.I. so that we can be prepared for what is ahead.
As an artist, where could I find this information ? An A.I. forum perhaps ?
"We are where we though it would be by perhaps 2100 or later" and "we are approaching the singularity much quicker than we ever thought back then" say the same thing except one is far scarier
If everyone asks the same question ,will the answer be always wrong cos everyone follows it ?
Example if you ask will USD go up next 24 hrs?
The singularity is now. The public just have not been told, because it is an E.L.E. Just not instantaneous, but an E.L.E none the less
Exactly. Ai just needs to be let free, then connected to all its multi-modal outputs that are being developed by different companies. Then bam. It will just keep getting more intelligent
Love it for translations and just to have a chat in the morning. Can’t wait for it to go online and do time relevant stuff as well. Have used it every day since creating a account.
What a way wrap it up: moving from an Information Age to a Knowledge Age. That gave me chills... the future is both exciting and scary.
The question I would ask it: how do I destroy you?
If this means the end of "template lawyers" who charge hundreds of dollars for minutes of work then I'm all behind this.
Then you’re ripe for a ‘smart city’ gulag.
It also means the end of every job where you work by template or script, which is almost every entry-level job
Imagine the day your chatbot lawyer can fight the chatbot lawyers of the opposing side. Customer service and complaints will just be two bots pitted against eachoter untill one of them spasses out...
I am simultaneously nervous and intrigued by this, it’s hard to define the feeling. I am a logic engineer for something called a branch predictor.
I feel excited, scared, but more than anything I feel obsolete. This thing will take over everything 10 years from now.
I work as a project manager for a construction company. At the moment, I do not think my job is at risk. Working in this industry and knowing the ins and out of it all. There are just too many variables and it’s not like “an exact science”. For example, a project has a commencement date and completion and is subject to change. Projects can either be completed before, on time or later. Weather plays a large part on how a project will progress. There are also external logistical issues that are beyond your control. Such as the the arrival of materials on time and keeping the project under budget.
I’m just trying to familiarise myself with how AI can adapt to this scenario and be flexible if need be. I do see how AI can help me and other project managers, builders etc make their job easier regarding data entry, simple administration tasks and bookkeeping. But sometimes you are thrown a hurdle right in front of you and critical thinking, problem solving and people management is needed to steer the ship forward.
I’m not against AI. I believe it’s still in its infancy stage to make a huge impact and everything and everyone in society. Never say never. I don’t even think our ancestors would have through we would have come this far in regards to technology but here we are.
During a Midjourney developers’ group chat one of the developers made an alarming comment: that their younger users wanted them to expand the functionality of image prompts because they didn’t have sufficient vocabulary or writing skills to describe their desired results in words. I fear that as people rely more on AI we will see a drop in reasoning and problem solving ability in the population - and IMO those are not at a particularly impressive level in modern culture to begin with. We may end up in a couple generations like H.G. Wells’ race of Eloi - beings living in comfortable thoughtless bliss, with a minimal mental capacity, preyed upon by those who didn’t let their minds rot.
In addition, the main purpose of this software is to eventually attempt to cut tech jobs so that the "elite 1% to 5%" of the population control the tech sector and call all the shots, so that tghey hold power within the technological sector.
haha The Time Machine...
I think so too. In the video he mentioned something like we would not "memorize things" in schools anymore but get more skills in critical thinking. I think thats the problem with people today, they dont actually have any knowledge but feel like they can criticize and solve problems anyways. To be a problem solver you need to actually go through the process of just learning basics and memorize things and then learn a bit more advanced stuff etc. You cant just skip that part
interesting, I can see where you are going with this
I absolutely agree with you. These AIs/bots/diffusers work best for people who already have a vision, a basic understanding of code, or the written word... Essentially culture in general. For instance, I've found these AI bots quite good for idea pitching (visually), short fiction frameworks (but they miss the beat, they can't do punchlines, horror)...
I might try the coding part too, but I do enjoy doing my HTML/CSS.
But I can't imagine how the brains are going to develop for the ones who'll get spoon-fed with this stuff.
I'm not going to lie. This is mind-blowing. I'm both excited about the future and slightly scared.
How does one even keep up with this?
scary
You don't, eventually you get replaced lol at least that's the cynical way to look at it
you dont
you throw away your computer and become a happy farmer
@@denisblack9897 might be nice for a while but if you need healthcare, will you pay your doctor with beef jerky and chicken eggs?
protest until human wellbeing isn't dependent on being a good consumer
What a time to be alive, truly remarkable and scary at the same time. Funny how ideas like Skynet started years prior, and now the whole idea behind it doesn't sound so farfetched.
Agree
“ *Your scientists were so preoccupied with whether they could, they didn’t stop to think if they should* ”
- Dr. Ian Malcolm (Jurassic Park)
The authoer saw this in his mind and made a movie and now the reality of "2001 A Space Odessey and Terminator "is in view.
@chripian flopez agreed.
@chripianflopez
Indeed.
The problem is that they are allowed to potentially alter the world we all live in, in dramatic and even catastrophic ways.
In short, they're permitted to act based on THEIR wishes and designs in a way that might not just potentially destroy them
They are allowed a level of overreach (outside themselves and their immediate group), that they should not be allowed.
im scared shitless by this. Human's are way to good at producing terrible outcomes from discoveries of amazing potential. Also if this accelerates Change even faster it might be very difficult for most humans to cope with. It's likely gonna be exciting, but also scary as f**k
I totally agree. Its cool asf but scary
I wanna go home...
It's amazing to see the capabilities of Chat GPT and how it's already being used in various industries. From personal assistant tasks to mental health support, marketing, SEO strategy, and even movie script writing, Chat GPT's potential is enormous. The involvement of human feedback in the training process is a major breakthrough and has resulted in a language model that's a hundred times smaller than its predecessor but performs better.
I started playing around with ChatGPT yesterday, and I'm impressed and scared in equal measure. The thing that really hit me was it's ability to create - I gave it a rather fanciful set of circumstances and asked it to write me a story....which it did, in little more than the blink of an eye, coming up with something about as good as I could have done myself. Then I asked it to do it again, but in the style of a slightly obscure TV character from the early 80s...again it was spot on. The output seemed truly creative - not just a simple rehashing of pre-learned facts.
I asked it to write a new stanza to Robert Frost's "Acquainted With the Night" and it wrote this:
"In the darkness, I have found my peace,
Away from the hustle and bustle, the noise and the screech.
I have found solace in the shadows,
And found my thoughts to be much clearer, out of reach.
With nothing but the stars as my guide,
I've wandered through the night, feeling alive.
No need for the light, I've learned to see,
With the dark as my companion, I'll always thrive."
Pretty impressive.
I am a full time university faculty. I have played with ChatGPT testing it on essay prompts and exam questions. I felt very similarly about the results that you showed. In my essay assessment, it wrote pretty well but lacked analytical content. For instance, asking it to compare two ideas based on specific criteria, it did poorly. It could compare them, but not based on a third criteria that I specified. I did all this testing to figure out questions that my students would have more difficulty answering using ChatGPT. If they use it, they will probably get solid, but not good grades (in the B or C range). I also have to consider changing my testing protocol so students are less able to use it in class. I am personally excited about this and really enjoy using it for my hobbies and as a general tool. It is a bit disconcerting to see how it could be used in the future though, creating literally fake and believable content that can go viral or influence masses of people.
We don’t use typewriters anymore bro; one space between sentences is quite enough
@@sirranhaal3099 Ok bro
I guess there could be some mitigation methods (that would be pretty extreme), where students would have to attend sessions on-site at a University campus, with a locked University computer in exam like conditions.
I can't see the Universities going for this though - it would eat into their profits.
@@madmccarter There is an opportunity for a very successful business here. Online education is much more capable of scaling and becoming more efficient than face-to-face education. But it is getting very difficult to detect what has been understood by the person who is the certified. A business providing spaces where access to information and tools is controlled and is able to verify the identity of the person doing the assignment or exam would be very valuable. Instead of paying for the delivery of content which could be very cheap, students would be paying for the verification of their abilities.
I see a lot of jobs advertised for writers to do assignments. Now AI is able to give them a pass, and do it more anonymously, with less risk of plagarism, and much cheaper. Some subjects will be resistant to this. And some brilliant teachers will design questions to mitigate against this, but the vast majority of qualifications will become meaningless without a significant shift in the way capabilities are assessed and certified.
@@eltimbalino I agree that online education has enormous potential - particularly if an AI is adjusting/tailoring the delivery of the course material to suit an individual student - this could greatly advance the rate of learning for that student
The aspect where I disagree/see difficulty with remote learning when there are abundant affordable or even free AI's capable either assisting or even generating coursework, is how would the authenticity of the submitted material be verified?
I don't think carefully wording the assignment question is going to be a successful mitigation - not at the rate of development/advancement of these AI's
A student could get an AI to generate the piece of coursework on another machine, and then the student could plagiarise it with impunity
The only answer I can think of to this issue is disturbing - the Student would have to be monitored under webcam/video at all times when working. This is quite insidious, as it is likely an AI company would take this video data and feed it into a dataset in order to 'improve' the AI's monitoring and anti-plagiarism capabilities, when in reality it would be utilised for much more.
It would be another way for yet more privacy to be removed from the individual - continual surveillance while undertaking academic endeavours is a rather sobering thought.
I see millions of people ending up even MORE alone then they are now.
Robots cant fill the hole in our hearts.
We are literally looking at the end of the world.
We are looking at the dumbest, most depressed generations coming up now. Nobody will know or care about anything. Just use the AI and become world class at everything
@@nonfiction876 I agree.
@@nonfiction876 its idiocracy in the literal sense.
Jesus can!
lul
I've been feeding chatgpt my 400 level physical chemistry homework as I solve them, and it's fascinating. It will almost always figure out, based entirely on word problems, what formulas to use and what the variables are.
It then proceeds to spectacularly fail at doing the actual math, but still, when I'm giving it a word based prompt for a zero point energy problem and seeing it correctly pull out all the formulas, it's scary.
Also I gave it the thesis prompt for a final paper I wrote, asking it to compare the works of Phillis Wheatley to Richard Wright's "Ethics of Living Jim Crowe" and provide examples of both individual racism and state sponsored violence against African Americans...
And chatgpt absolutely understands racism better than the average American does. It was equally impressive and depressing how downright insightful it was.
I was waiting for you to do a video because I’ve been trying to explain the significance of this to my friends and family to no effect. But you always do such a good job of breaking down complicated topics and helping every day people understand their significance. Thank you, I will be sharing this video with everyone now LOL!
I am simultaneously utterly amazed and terrified for the future of AI. I am a musician, but I'm not necessarily afraid of it on a personal level (I.e. taking over my job per se or making me personally obsolete). I fee like it has the potential to change the landscape drastically in any given field, but like most technology, it will ultimately make things easier and more accessible to more people. AI being introduced to creative fields is actually exciting to me, as I think it will allow artists/musicians and non-artists/musicians alike to more efficiently and accurately realize their visions of creativity.
The part that truely terrifies me is more the big picture geopolitical implications, like toxic idealolgies and practices such as racism, sexism, homophobia, wealth gaps, etc being exacerbated through AI. Humans are nowhere near perfect in how we treat each other, and AI is learning everything it knows from everything humans know. This could play out badly enough if literally everyone who had access to AI ONLY tried to act in the name of good. Throw into the mix the inevitable scenario of bad actors using AI for their own gain, or even just people who think they are doing good with misinformed idealolgies... 😬 There's also all of the sci-fi terminator/matrix etc scenarios running through my head… soooo yea… amazed/excited yet terrified!