Artificial Intelligence and Public Comment

I don't want to go off the rails, but it's not clear to me that this is true. I think we think of ourselves, and our emotions and the behaviors that stem from them, as more "special" than they are. There are folks who really dig deep on this stuff who would say human behavior is an algorithm - our brains operating systems. Truck nuts might be the holy grail of AI.

Bringing it back. The FWP Commission recently aborted a terrible proposal for HD 313. In their own words, they were inundated with emails in opposition. In one morning someone could've generated a hundred in favor, from 100 different email addresses, signed by 100 different real Montanans. Could that have changed the outcome? I just think it is a matter of folks adopting what already exists at this point before we have a real problem.

At the end of the day I think physically showing up is going to be more an more important.
 
Your value isn't writing the script it's figuring out how to leverage various scripts to benefit your company given it's goals.

First part is pretty easy for AI to do the second part is much more difficult.
This is what I came to realize after getting over the initial shock of being asked about ChatGPT in my interview the other day.

There's probably/possibly some essentially human element in communication that AI will not be able to replace or at least not for a while. But not counting on it...

And like others have pointed out, there are still major ethical concerns regarding the use of AI generated language being passed off as human.

My biggest concern though is that it's sometimes hard to see the big picture end goal of devs designing this stuff. Sort of tired of the assumption that technological progress is always our friend/to our benefit as a species. Big questions to ponder.
 
Never maybe? I did I think part of that requires understanding human emotion which isn't just an algorithm.

Case and point, David Ramsey. There is no mathematical reason why his stuff works. It's just not supported by any math or data, but yet it's honestly the best solution for a ton of people and has brought them a lot of financial success. I'm not sure how a machine learns how to deal with the vagaries of humans.

How do you teach marketing for example for EVs to work in the US you need sell folks on EV trucks, now 1. That's nuts cause trucks are just stupid for 99% of drivers and 2. Truck owners are totally illogical.

I'm not sure how you teach AI to put truck nuts, big tires, and an affliction sticker on a rivian.
I bet if I snagged some of your DNA and ran it through Ancestory.com, wllm, Spock would be somewhere in your family tree.😁
 
I'm not sure how you teach AI to put truck nuts, big tires, and an affliction sticker on a rivian.

I don’t think that would be difficult for an algorithm to predict, simply with browser history data on a macro level.

It wouldn’t surprise me at all if I see an add shortly for one of those things you’ve listed solely by replying to your post using those words.

I agree with your premise that human nuance on an individual basis is hard to predict, but it isn’t so hard to predict behaviors of a population- we are kind of a herd animal.
 
100%

There are essays upon essays about how the system is already adopting viewpoints, and or changing them due to constraints placed upon it by Those Who Run It.

Marginal Revolution is a good blog, that often has very good takes and links on ChatGPT. https://marginalrevolution.com/marginalrevolution/2022/12/what-are-the-politics-of-chatgpt.html
Another good blog/writer who covers a lot of this stuff is Mike Solana at https://www.piratewires.com/p/chaos-a-future-history-of-artificial
 
Never maybe? I did I think part of that requires understanding human emotion which isn't just an algorithm.

Case and point, David Ramsey. There is no mathematical reason why his stuff works. It's just not supported by any math or data, but yet it's honestly the best solution for a ton of people and has brought them a lot of financial success. I'm not sure how a machine learns how to deal with the vagaries of humans.

How do you teach marketing for example for EVs to work in the US you need sell folks on EV trucks, now 1. That's nuts cause trucks are just stupid for 99% of drivers and 2. Truck owners are totally illogical.

I'm not sure how you teach AI to put truck nuts, big tires, and an affliction sticker on a rivian.
Man, I feel you're 1. being too optimistic and 2. you are ignoring history.

How many times have humans said it can't happen or we can't do it and been right?

The idea of trying to learn the "vagaries" of human thought may feel difficult now. But 40 years ago the idea that someone could us a computer to generate the comments in Nameless's OP in just a sec would have been equally "never".

What about asking someone in 1865 about walking on the Moon?

Whoever mentioned hubris, couldn't be more spot on.
 
Imagine being me, interviewing for a really good job this past Tuesday, one in which my writing will be "at least 50% of your responsibilities" and where my MA in English is a big part of why I'm able to argue for higher comp than the person I'm replacing. CEO says "We love and trust your writing ability and look forward to investing in it as we bring you onboard." As the meeting ended, he had one more question: "Have you heard of ChatGPT? Is there a way you can work that into your role here to save yourself time in your writing process?"

Yeah, I slaved through six years of school and poured my guts into becoming a writer, just so I can punch prompts in for a blank blank robot to spit back some tone-less soulless sentences we can pass off as me.
What if the CEO didn't ask the question? You get hired and then see someone else in the dept load in all their prose so it can learn style and then asks the chatbot to write a new paper. For what would take a person 3-4days, it takes 8 min to complete and 88 min for him to polish. At the end of the year, he has 10x the productivity of you and gets a huge raise.

This will eventually become like a calculator. When I was young, calculators were banned from math class because they wanted you to learn how the operations worked and demonstrate the ability to do them. Now calculators are commonplace for a test, if not required. The average IQ is still 100 but the average person knows more today than 100yrs ago. We simply raise the bar. We plug in "i before e except after c" and all those other rules. Maybe it would eliminate passive writing which would push the world to a who new level. Dare to dream.;)

In one morning someone could've generated a hundred in favor, from 100 different email addresses, signed by 100 different real Montanans. Could that have changed the outcome? I just think it is a matter of folks adopting what already exists at this point before we have a real problem.
Agree, but why wouldn't both sides of an issue do it. Hell, I encourage it. You already pointed out the end result - written comments will be meaningless. We could also conclude there will be so many that they won't be able to read them all, assume they ever did.
 
I don’t think that would be difficult for an algorithm to predict, simply with browser history data on a macro level.

It wouldn’t surprise me at all if I see an add shortly for one of those things you’ve listed solely by replying to your post using those words.

I agree with your premise that human nuance on an individual basis is hard to predict, but it isn’t so hard to predict behaviors of a population- we are kind of a herd animal.
Man, I feel you're 1. being too optimistic and 2. you are ignoring history.

How many times have humans said it can't happen or we can't do it and been right?

The idea of trying to learn the "vagaries" of human thought may feel difficult now. But 40 years ago the idea that someone could us a computer to generate the comments in Nameless's OP in just a sec would have been equally "never".

What about asking someone in 1865 about walking on the Moon?

Whoever mentioned hubris, couldn't be more spot on.

But see what it's doing now is just doing key word searches and copy pasting within the confines of a grammar program. It's just aggregating.

Anything in that category sure... but I guess I'm saying can it do art.

Not replication, sure it can copy Picasso, but can it be Picasso. I don't know... (like invent cubism not his derivative stuff)

Feels like getting into the late season TNG episodes with Data and his emotion chip.
 
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But see what it's doing now is just doing key word searches and copy pasting within the confines of a grammar program. It's just aggregating.

Anything in that category sure... but I guess I'm saying can it do art.

Not replication, sure it can copy Picasso, but can it be Picasso. I don't know...

Feels like getting into the late season TNG episodes with Data and his emotion chip.

I’m fascinated by the subject, so I’m guilty of violating my own desires of sticking with the OP, but a lot of folks will tell you that in 10 years 10 of the top 10 songs in the nation at any given moment will be created by AI. In fact, portions of many already are

There’s some pretty amazing AI music generators coming out that basically know what’s catchy to the human ear.

Then there’s AI created art.


And then there’s systems out there that allow you to just type in a description of a picture, no matter how weird, and it outputs the art. Just nuts

 
What if the CEO didn't ask the question? You get hired and then see someone else in the dept load in all their prose so it can learn style and then asks the chatbot to write a new paper. For what would take a person 3-4days, it takes 8 min to complete and 88 min for him to polish. At the end of the year, he has 10x the productivity of you and gets a huge raise.

This will eventually become like a calculator. When I was young, calculators were banned from math class because they wanted you to learn how the operations worked and demonstrate the ability to do them. Now calculators are commonplace for a test, if not required. The average IQ is still 100 but the average person knows more today than 100yrs ago. We simply raise the bar. We plug in "i before e except after c" and all those other rules. Maybe it would eliminate passive writing which would push the world to a who new level. Dare to dream.;)
I mean I know how competition works. And technically I'm in charge of the dept so it will ultimately be up to me whether it is used or not and how much. (I told him I'll set up some experiments and run my writing against ChatGPT and see how each performs and we'll go from there.)

My personal hangups center less on concerns for my own career viability, though I do have those concerns. Bigger concern is that I can't shake the feeling that asking computers to create prose, poetry, visual art and music is wrong and dark in some way that's hard to articulate.

TL;DR: I understand your argument in a utilitarian sense but I'm not sure that it tells the entire story. Hope my tone didn't come across as too snarky, btw.
 
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