https://www.theverge.com/tldr/915176/nft-metaverse-ai-weirdos
"One of the most mortifying things about knowing a lot of techies is listening
to them tell me excitedly about some very important discovery that they believe
they have made. Recently, I ran into an acquaintance of mine, who began talking
my ear off about an amazing discovery he’d made with LLMs. Knowledge, it turns
out, is structured into language! You could put one word into ChatGPT and it
might understand what you wanted, or make up a word and see if it understood
what you meant! These amazing new tools have revealed that the English corpus
contains so
much about its speakers!
He concluded that LLMs are a discovery on par with writing.
Regular humans hit on this idea about a century ago; my most generous
interpretation of what he was telling me was that he’d hit on a kind of naive,
confused version of Structuralism; Saussure via a game of telephone. (There has
been recent work on a similar point, which argues that one needs to understand
LLMs via literary theory, but it starts with Saussure.) I tried to get out of
the conversation as quickly as I could, not least because he seemed frustrated
that I didn’t see things exactly as he did — a new behavior and likely a
symptom of LLM overuse.
Not every discovery that’s new to you is actually new. For instance, there’s
Elon Musk marvelling at the complexity of hands; I could point to a variety of
disciplines for which this is 101-level stuff: artists, who have to figure out
how to draw them; surgeons, who have to figure out how to operate on them;
musicians and magicians, who rely on extremely fine motor skill to produce
their work; neuroscientists and psychologists, who doubtless encountered the
cortical homunculus early in their careers. Or Palmer Luckey claiming that “no
one has done a postmortem” on the One Laptop Per Child computing project —
because he didn’t know there’s a whole book about it called
The Charisma
Machine.
At its most absurd nadir, one is reminded of Juicero, a company that sold a
$400 juicer that did the same work as squeezing its proprietary juice packs
with one’s bare hands.
Look, discovering something that’s new to you is exciting — ask anyone who
listened to me yell about the joys of European (higher-fat) butter — but you
can’t take for granted that something that’s new to you is new to
everyone.
These things have in common a certain incuriosity that I have found endemic
among a certain kind of tech enthusiast, particularly the ones who are most
interested in startups and entrepreneurship. Perhaps they have been so siloed
that they did not realize their “discovery” was well-known elsewhere, or
perhaps their self-conception is that they are the smartest, and if they don’t
know something, no one knows it."
Via Cass M.
Cheers,
*** Xanni ***
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mailto:xanni@xanadu.net Andrew Pam
http://xanadu.com.au/ Chief Scientist, Xanadu
https://glasswings.com.au/ Partner, Glass Wings
https://sericyb.com.au/ Manager, Serious Cybernetics