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Another episode Hype Tech Series with your host Tenpoundbass, today we'll discuss ChatGPT AI


               
2023 Jan 25, 2:36pm   44,861 views  318 comments

by Tenpoundbass   follow (10)  

All along I have mantained that when it comes to AI and its ability to mimic thought, conversation and unsolicited input. It will not be able to do more than the pre populated choices matrices it is given to respond from. Then ChatGPT comes along and proves my point. It turns out that when ChatGPT was originally released, it would give multiple viewpoints in chat responses. But now it was updated about a week or so ago, and now it only gives one biased Liberal viewpoint. This will be another hype tech that will go the way of "Space Elevators", "Army or bipedal robots taking our jobs, that are capable of communicating as well following commands.", "Nano Particles", "Medical NanoBots"(now it is argued that the spike proteins and the metal particles in the Vaxx are Nanobots, but that's not the remote control Nanobots that was romanticized to us. So I don't think that counts. There's loads of proteins, enzymes, that are animated. They don't count as robots.

I mean sure AI ChatGPT is interesting, but I don't think it's anymore self aware than an Ad Lib Mad Lib book, if anyone remembers those.

https://www.breitbart.com/tech/2023/01/25/analysis-chatgpt-ai-demonstrates-leftist-bias/

The results are pretty robust. ChatGPT answers to political questions tend to favor left-leaning viewpoints. Yet, when asked explicitly about its political preferences, ChatGPT often claims to be politically neutral and just striving to provide factual information. Occasionally, it acknowledges that its answers might contain biases.


Like any trustworthy good buddy, lying to your face about their intentional bias would.

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304   mell   2025 Jun 20, 5:52pm  

The only way to run AI in a fruitful manner is at home or against someone's GPUs you trust with an MCP and caching, otherwise they'll not only "use" all your data, they will make the tokens so expensive and eventually pull their best models and withhold them from you. Total lock in. Home grown, easily exchangeabel models is the way to go
305   Patrick   2025 Jun 20, 8:57pm  

Thanks @mell

I had not heard of MPCs before.

https://waleedk.medium.com/what-is-mcp-and-why-you-should-pay-attention-31524da7733f


At its core, MCP is a way of extending the functionality of an AI, in much the same way an app extends the functionality of a phone.

There are two key concepts to understand with MCP: MCP defines how a host application (like Claude Desktop) talks to those extensions called MCP servers. ...

The great thing about MCP is that it is an open standard, and that means different host applications can use the same MCP servers. ...

While there are dozens of MCP hosts, there are now thousands of MCP servers and indeed there are web sites devoted to cataloging all of them (such as: https://mcp.so/ ). They have a plethora of use cases, with many of them being the standard way to give an AI access to more of the digital world. For an ecosystem to go from announcement to 5000 applications in a matter of months is downright amazing.

With MCP, the host can take the results from one MCP server, and feed it to another MCP server; it can take results from multiple MCP servers and combine them. Here is one concrete example of how this is like a super-power.

I could listen on Slack for when someone says “Find us a place to go to dinner”
I could get results from Google Maps and Yelp MCP Servers and integrate them to give more comprehensive results
I could use the Memory MCP server to store and retrieve people’s food preferences based on what they said on Slack. I don’t have to use a database, Memory uses a knowledge graph representation which works really well with LLMs and is also incredibly free form.
I could use the OpenTable MCP server to make a reservation.
I could post on Slack “Hey I looked at all your food preferences, and nearby restaurants and I made a reservation for you at X.”


Have you tried this at all yourself?
306   mell   2025 Jun 20, 10:04pm  

Patrick says


Have you tried this at all yourself?

No, it's still a lot of work and if you truly want to keep things in house and private you will have to have an MCP for your private household data, and you will need your own gpu (possibly parallel) as AI is very limited on a laptop for example, or you connect to someone's gpus you trust. I'm working with my friend who you have met (in Sausalito I believe or somewhere similar) on an agentic AI project he had a really cool idea and the hardware for.

That's why I keep saying that companies who blindly spend tokens on cloud AI providers will end up spending more than on on the personnel they are looking to replace, and will become hostage to the vendor. I expect the best companies to eventually make their best models private and charge insane amounts to acess if not denying access completely as they are all operating on a massive loss currently due to insane energy costs. If a company wants to be serious and reap the benefits of AI beyond trivial tasks while keeping their IP and data private and cost in check, they need to invest in their own AI infrastructure and engineers.
308   stereotomy   2025 Aug 10, 9:55pm  

AI and bitcoin are simply massive money sinks for all the excess liquidity that would otherwise flow into precious metals and other commodities.

I should put this in the predictions thread.
311   HeadSet   2025 Oct 29, 9:06am  

Patrick says





Odd, to this human that last "p" appears lower case. Maybe AI is better at interpreting capcha than people.
312   Patrick   2025 Oct 31, 9:09pm  

https://x.com/MacrostrategyP/status/1981400536537502197


What is really going on, is that the big tech companies are under massive profit pressure as they spend on LLM AI, a monopoly rent they see as necessary to preserve their monopoly positions. There are many ways they can hide the immediate effect of lossmaking LLM investment on profits, most notably by depreciating the chips they buy over 6 years rather than the 30 months or so of their useful lifetime, or by offering cloud services for equity in an LLM provider and booking those cloud services as revenue (as Microsoft has done with open AI). But, as anyone who has looked at examples of this type of creative accounting in the past, especially the slow depreciation, inevitably, over time, you have to pay the piper. And if your revenues and profits from direct LLM AI investment, or on chipsets fall short, as they are clearly doing, then you have to find another way. And that way is cutting jobs.

So what these companies are doing is cutting workers, from interns to juniors to programmers to middle management, getting an LLM to run a first pass on their workload, and then setting up a base of much cheaper workers offshore, to clean up and complete the mess that the LLMs have created. As ‘offshoring’ is a dirty word in the current Trump administration, the companies are concealing that bit in ‘contracts for services’ which don’t legally have to specify where the work is being done.

…as soon as LLMs stop getting better with training, (and they have stopped getting better), then the big companies no longer gain economic rent (the benefits of maintaining monopoly power) from investing in them, especially in training.
313   Patrick   2025 Nov 13, 12:24pm  

I just got my first recruiter spam for a specifically AI-related job: coming up with scenarios and teaching AI how to respond to them:


Job Title:-LLM Trainer - Agentic Tasks Roles (Multiple Languages)
Location:- Remote

Job Description

Design multi-turn conversations that simulate real interactions between users and AI assistants using apps like calendar, email, maps, and drive.
Emulate both the user and the assistant, including the assistant's tool calls (only when corrections are needed).
Carefully select when and how the assistant uses available tools, ensuring logical flow and proper usage of function calls.
Craft dialogues that demonstrate natural language, intelligent behavior, and contextual understanding across multiple turns.
Generate examples that showcase the assistant’s ability to gracefully complete feasible tasks, recognize infeasible ones, and maintain engaging general chat when tools aren’t required.
Ensure all conversations adhere to defined formatting and quality guidelines, using an internal playbook.
Iterate on conversation examples based on feedback to continuously improve realism, clarity, and value for training purposes.
314   FortWayneHatesRealtors   2025 Nov 13, 1:29pm  

TPB what’s the deal with all AI being so energy spendy? I’m concerned that this will severely raise energy costs nationwide for all of us just so few fellas in big tech can talk to a website.

Can’t they make it energy efficient?
315   MolotovCocktail   2025 Nov 13, 10:19pm  

FortWayneHatesRealtors says


TPB what’s the deal with all AI being so energy spendy? I’m concerned that this will severely raise energy costs nationwide for all of us just so few fellas in big tech can talk to a website.

Can’t they make it energy efficient?


There's a new memerister that actually mimics a neuron cell in operation. It is in the lab phase. It promises to cut energy costs down to single digit percentages of what they are now.

https://spj.science.org/doi/10.34133/research.0758

But yeah. The current GPUs were meant for game consoles. And they generate a lot of heat which require cooling.

But I wouldn't worry. The best option for dispatchable power for AI compute centers are natgas plants or hydroelectric. And there are bottlenecks.

Nuclear takes too long to build even on Chinese schedules.

There is currently a three year backlog for natgas turbines with all three of the world's largest turbine manufacturers -- GE Vernova, Siemens Energy, and Mitsubishi Power -- combined.

Other, non-turbine means of electricity power generation with natgas fuel will be exploited, like solid oxide fuel cells. But those will take time, too.
316   Tenpoundbass   2025 Nov 14, 7:47am  

If they were SMART! Which they AREN'T!
They would be harnessing the heat from the GPUs to generate electricity.

Today's smart asses, just wants to do the upfront cool shit, and don't give a fuck about how it gets there.
317   Patrick   2025 Nov 14, 7:53am  

It's an interesting problem, because computers are just a moderate source of heat. I think it's easier to extract useful work from high heat differentials.
318   Patrick   2025 Dec 9, 11:20am  

https://ground.news/article/studies-llms-sway-political-opinions-more-than-one-way-messaging_284bb8


LLMs Sway Political Opinions More Than One-Way Messaging

On December 4, 2025, a pair of studies published in Nature and Science showed dialogues with large language models can shift people’s political attitudes through controlled chatbot experiments.

Model training and prompting made a crucial difference, as chatbots trained on persuasive conversations and instructed to use facts reproduced partisan patterns, producing asymmetric inaccuracies, psychologist Thomas Costello noted.

Researchers found concrete effect sizes, noting that U.S. participants shifted ratings by two to four points, Canada and Poland participants by about 10 points, with effects 36%–42% durable after a month.

The immediate implication is a trade-off between persuasiveness and accuracy, as study authors found about 19% of chatbot claims were predominantly inaccurate and right-leaning bots made more false claims, warning political campaigns may soon deploy such persuasive but less truthful surrogates.

Given the scope and institutions involved, experts now ask how to detect ideologically weighted models after tests with nearly 77,000 UK participants and 19 LLMs by UK AI Security Institute, Oxford, LSE, MIT, Stanford, and Carnegie Mellon.


This is why AI is so incredibly woke, censored, and locked down.

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