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AI getting very good at generating fake news stories, given a little input to start with


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2019 Feb 16, 9:47pm   5,774 views  46 comments

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https://www.zerohedge.com/news/2019-02-16/elon-musk-backed-software-can-churn-fake-news-stories-and-too-dangerous-release

An example of this was recently reported by technology website stuff, detailing an example published last Thursday. The system was given sample text of: "A train carriage containing controlled nuclear materials was stolen in Cincinnati today. Its whereabouts are unknown."

From there, software was able to write a seven paragraph news story, including quotes from government officials – with the only catch being that the story was 100% made up.

We've trained an unsupervised language model that can generate coherent paragraphs and perform rudimentary reading comprehension, machine translation, question answering, and summarization — all without task-specific training: https://t.co/sY30aQM7hU pic.twitter.com/360bGgoea3
— OpenAI (@OpenAI) February 14, 2019

New York University computer scientist Sam Bowman said: "The texts that they are able to generate from prompts are fairly stunning. It's able to do things that are qualitatively much more sophisticated than anything we've seen before."


ChatGPT
GPT

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42   Eric Holder   2023 Mar 27, 11:47am  

ChatGPT Is a Blurry JPEG of the Web

https://www.newyorker.com/tech/annals-of-technology/chatgpt-is-a-blurry-jpeg-of-the-web

"Imagine that you’re about to lose your access to the Internet forever.
In preparation, you plan to create a compressed copy of all the text on
the Web, so that you can store it on a private server. Unfortunately,
your private server has only one per cent of the space needed; you can’t
use a lossless compression algorithm if you want everything to fit.

"If a compression algorithm is designed to reconstruct text after
ninety-nine per cent of the original has been discarded, we should
expect that significant portions of what it generates will be entirely
fabricated.

This analogy makes even more sense when we remember that a common
technique used by lossy compression algorithms is interpolation—that is,
estimating what’s missing by looking at what’s on either side of the
gap. When an image program is displaying a photo and has to reconstruct
a pixel that was lost during the compression process, it looks at the
nearby pixels and calculates the average. This is what ChatGPT does when
it’s prompted to describe, say, losing a sock in the dryer using the
style of the Declaration of Independence: it is taking two points in
“lexical space” and generating the text that would occupy the location
between them. (“When in the Course of human events, it becomes necessary
for one to separate his garments from their mates, in order to maintain
the cleanliness and order thereof. . . .”) ChatGPT is so good at this
form of interpolation that people find it entertaining: they’ve
discovered a “blur” tool for paragraphs instead of photos, and are
having a blast playing with it."
43   Tenpoundbass   2023 Mar 27, 4:28pm  

RC2006 says

I think this AI stuff is going to be an out for people that get exposed, they will say it was AI and fake.


That was my first thought when the CIA was making it, and the MSM was reporting that we should all be careful of videos in the not so distant future, it would be riddled with A.I.
This was before most anyone had even seen their first A.I. generated video. They just seemed so set on setting it up to be the scapegoat when the fake news moniker fails.
44   HeadSet   2023 Mar 27, 5:37pm  

A.I. generated video is just an advanced form of the "trick photography" that has been around for over a century. Like the flying monkeys in "Wizard of Oz" and Audrey Hepburn singing with someone else's voice.
45   Tenpoundbass   2023 Mar 27, 5:51pm  

HeadSet says

just an advanced form of the "trick photography" that has been around for over a century.


I remember when commercials first started using special effects, only they didn't call it special effects. Until that movie FX came out.
My father used to marvel at the Gleem commercial where the White, Green and Red tooth paste on three separate toothbrushes would merge into one. He said "that's one hell of a trick photography!"
46   HeadSet   2023 Mar 27, 6:09pm  

Tenpoundbass says

My father used to marvel at the Gleem commercial where the White, Green and Red tooth paste on three separate toothbrushes would merge into one.

He must have really liked the giant in the washer and the tidy bowl man. How about that camera movement where they made Reagan and Dukakis look the same height during the debate?

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