I made a post like this not long ago, specifically about hiding all sports communities, yeah.
I made a post like this not long ago, specifically about hiding all sports communities, yeah.
It’s getting old telling people this, but… the AI that we have right now? Isn’t even really AI. It’s certainly not anything like in the movies. It’s just pattern-recognition algorithms. It doesn’t know or understand anything and it has no context. It can’t tell the difference between a truth and a lie, and it doesn’t know what a finger is. It just paints amalgamations of things it’s already seen, or throws together things that seem common to it— with no filter nor sense of “that can’t be correct”.
I’m not saying there’s nothing to be afraid of concerning today’s “AI”, but it’s not comparable to movie/book AI.
Edit: The replies annoy me. It’s just the same thing all over again— everything I said seems to have went right over most peoples’ heads. If you don’t know what today’s “AI” is, then please stop assuming about what it is. Your imagination is way more interesting than what we actually have right now. This is why we should have never called what we have now “AI” in the first place— same reason we should never have called things “black holes”. You take a misnomer and your imagination goes wild, and none of it is factual.
Let me go fix that… 😉
I don’t mean you specifically, friend. I’m just talking about the general (but not absolute, obviously) nature of people. But yee.
An “r/autos” was always doomed to lose to an “r/cars”. It’s just how English works and what people end up searching for.
Never underestimate the importance of convenience and the lack of work most people will do in most circumstances— and I’m not even blaming those people. A third-party tool will never catch on the way a built-in, organic convenience will.
I can never rely on people to self-tag posts. But tagging communities would be much more manageable and helpful.