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Joined
2 yr. ago

  • Underlying original post: a Twitter bluecheck says,

    Sometimes in the process of writing a good enough prompt for ChatGPT, I end up solving my own problem, without even needing to submit it.

    Matt Novak on Bluesky screenshots this and comments,

    AI folks have now discovered "thinking"

  • If you can't get through two short paragraphs without equating Stalinism and "social justice", you may be a cockwomble.

  • Welp, time to start the thread with fresh Awful for everyone to regret:

    r/phenotypes

  • Here's a start:

    Given their enormous environmental cost and their foundation upon exploited labor, justifying the use of Large Generative AI Models in telecommunications is an uphill task. Since their output is, in the technical sense of the term, bullshit, climbing that hill has no merit.

  • I think it could be very valuable to alignment-pill these people.

    Zoom and enhance!

    alignment-pill

    The inability to hear what their own words sound like is terminal. At this stage, we can only provide palliative care, i.e., shoving into lockers.

  • [Fiction] [Comic] Effective Altruism and Rationality meet at a Secular Solstice afterparty

    When the very first thing you say about a character is that they "have money in crypto", you may already be doing it wrong

  • "The Publisher of the Journal "Nature" Is Emailing Authors of Scientific Papers, Offering to Sell Them AI Summaries of Their Own Work", by Maggie Harrison Dupré at Futurism:

    Springer Nature, the stalwart publisher of scientific journals including the prestigious Nature as well as the nearly 200-year-old magazine Scientific American, is approaching the authors of papers in its journals with AI-generated "Media Kits" to summarize and promote their research.

    In an email to journal authors obtained by Futurism, Springer told the scientists that its AI tool will "maximize the impact" of their research, saying the $49 package will return "high-quality" outputs for marketing and communication purposes. The publisher's sell for the package hinges on the argument that boiling down complex, jargon-laden research into digestible soundbites for press releases and social media copy can be difficult and time-consuming — making it, Springer asserts, a task worth automating.

  • Today's news....

    internally at Meta:

    -trans and nonbinary themes stripped from Messenger

    -enforcement policy now allows for the denial of trans people's existence

    -tampons removed from men's restrooms

    -DEI programs shuttered

    -Kaplan briefed top conservative influencers the night before policy changes were announced

  • My favorite quote from flipping through LessWrong to find something passingly entertaining:

    You only multiply the SAT z-score by 0.8 if you're selecting people on high SAT score and estimating the IQ of that subpopulation, making a correction for regressional Goodhart. Rationalists are more likely selected for high g which causes both SAT and IQ

    (From the comments for "The average rationalist IQ is about 122".)

  • Saying that Excel is not and never was a good solution for any problem feels like a rather blinkered, programmer-brained technique.

  • xcancel link, since nitter.net is kaput.

    New diet villain just dropped. Believe or disbelieve this specific one, "fat" or even "polyunsaturated fat" increasingly looks like a failure as a natural category. Only finer-grained concepts like "linoleic acid" are useful for carving reality at the joints.

    Reply:

    This systematic review and meta-analysis doesn't seem to indicate that linoleic acid is unusually bad for all-cause mortality or cardiovascular disease events.

    https://doi.org/10.1002/14651858.CD011094.pub4

    Yud writes back:

    And is there another meta-analysis showing the opposite? I kinda just don't trust those anymore, unless somebody I trust vouches for the meta-analysis.

    Ah, yes, the argumentum ad other-sources-must-exist-somewhere-um.

  • Yud is against seed oils, right? Or was that Siskind? I have a vague memory of the topic coming up but was unable to substantiate it in the 22 seconds of archive-searching that I was willing to do.

  • "What festivals of atonement, what sacred games shall we have to invent? Is not the greatness of this deed too great for us?"

  • You don't even have to be well-known to get crank attention. Post anything with "quantum" in the title on the arXiv and they'll find your e-mail.

    Source: this is one of the few times when I can say "trust me, bro" and be entirely sincere about it