Google apologizes for ‘missing the mark’ after Gemini generated racially diverse Nazis::Google says it’s aware of historically inaccurate results for its Gemini AI image generator, following criticism that it depicted historically white groups as people of color.

  • @kromem@lemmy.world
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    4 months ago

    Lemmy hasn’t met a pitchfork it doesn’t pick up.

    You are correct. The most cited researcher in the space agrees with you. There’s been a half dozen papers over the past year replicating the finding that LLMs generate world models from the training data.

    But that doesn’t matter. People love their confirmation bias.

    Just look at how many people think it only predicts what word comes next, thinking it’s a Markov chain and completely unaware of how self-attention works in transformers.

    The wisdom of the crowd is often idiocy.

    • @FooBarrington@lemmy.world
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      14 months ago

      Thank you very much. The confirmation bias is crazy - one guy is literally trying to tell me that AI generators don’t have knowledge because, when asking it for a picture of racially diverse Nazis, you get a picture of racially diverse Nazis. The facts don’t matter as long as you get to be angry about stupid AIs.

      It’s hard to tell a difference between these people and Trump supporters sometimes.

      • @kromem@lemmy.world
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        4 months ago

        It’s hard to tell a difference between these people and Trump supporters sometimes.

        To me it feels a lot like when I was arguing against antivaxxers.

        The same pattern of linking and explaining research but having it dismissed because it doesn’t line up with their gut feelings and whatever they read when “doing their own research” guided by that very confirmation bias.

        The field is moving faster than any I’ve seen before, and even people working in it seem to be out of touch with the research side of things over the past year since GPT-4 was released.

        A lot of outstanding assumptions have been proven wrong.

        It’s a bit like the early 19th century in physics, where everyone assumed things that turned out wrong over a very short period where it all turned upside down.

        • @FooBarrington@lemmy.world
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          24 months ago

          Exactly. They have very strong feelings that they are right, and won’t be moved - not by arguments, research, evidence or anything else.

          Just look at the guy telling me “they can’t reason!”. I asked whether they’d accept they are wrong if I provide a counter example, and they literally can’t say yes. Their world view won’t allow it. If I’m sure I’m right that no counter examples exist to my point, I’d gladly say “yes, a counter example would sway me”.