rickdg

joined 1 year ago
[–] rickdg@lemmy.world 2 points 1 month ago

I’d love to see that.

[–] rickdg@lemmy.world 0 points 1 month ago

Once there’s a benchmark, LLMs can optimise for it. This is just another piece of news where people call “game over” but the money poured into R&D isn’t stopping anytime soon. Wasn’t synthetic data supposed to be game over for LLMs? Its limitations have been identified and it’s still being leveraged.

[–] rickdg@lemmy.world 11 points 1 month ago (3 children)

I believe that’s Apple talking to Google, not anything local you can own.

[–] rickdg@lemmy.world -3 points 1 month ago (4 children)

Real headline: Apple research presents possible improvements in benchmarking LLMs.

[–] rickdg@lemmy.world 17 points 1 month ago (1 children)

The cars were probably also being nudged just in case.

[–] rickdg@lemmy.world 44 points 1 month ago (10 children)

If you tell corporations there’s a way to increase lock-in and decrease account sharing, they’re gonna make it work.

[–] rickdg@lemmy.world 73 points 1 month ago

insert surprised pikachu face here

[–] rickdg@lemmy.world 6 points 1 month ago (3 children)

Something like NextDNS as a no-brainer? It works but hits the limit of the free tier if people use it beyond their phone.

[–] rickdg@lemmy.world 81 points 1 month ago (16 children)

I used to recommend uBlock as a no-brainer, now folks really need to change towards a better browser.

[–] rickdg@lemmy.world 29 points 2 months ago (1 children)

Old news? Seems to be a subject of several papers for some time now. Synthetic data has been used successfully already for very specific domains.

[–] rickdg@lemmy.world 1 points 2 months ago* (last edited 2 months ago) (1 children)

Normification is a facet of our undemocratic capitalism. As you see yourself as a consumer of the internet and not a citizen, you mostly assume that a thing being

  1. popular
  2. monetizable
  3. and convenient

is always preferable.

So the internet continues to have a huge potential to host many cool places, but

  1. they can't reach users that might be interested
  2. gaining support from small donations is difficult
  3. and they can't integrate a complete set of features, accessibility, design and content moderation.

If you ask an average internet user about these places, it's a common response to say they're weird as in not normal. If you dig a bit for what they mean, it's usually the above. Nobody is there, it can't make money and it doesn't have all the things.

[–] rickdg@lemmy.world -3 points 2 months ago (27 children)

We would be better than ever, if not for the normification.

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