Not good. 8 in 10 Chatbots Inclined to Assist Users in Planning Attacks. Guardrails, we need better guardrails. There are too many crazies out there. We don't need to assist them.
In this interview, Jensen Huang took umbrage when questioned whether it was wise to sell nVIDIA chips to China. Because China will just steal your ideas and tech. Jensen said that was a loser's attitude. People mocked Dwarkesh for asking the question. But today, there is this post that Jensen has decided not to "invest" in China after all. I guess Dwarkesh wasn't so naïve after all.
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Not too long ago, ChatGPT was mocked in its inability to accurately answer a question about how many letter "r"s there were in the word strawberry. This became known as the strawberry problem. This was attributed to tokenization problems. But this post came out recently that indicates that the problem still persists today with ChatGPT, and is a problem with the letter "e". It was suspected that ChatGPT was trained on the strawberry problem so that it gets the answer to that question right. but still struggles with other letters. I get variable answers.
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Most companies aren't anywhere near ready for AI. And it's largely because they haven't figured out well enough how their business operates.
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Chinese court rules companies can't fire workers just because AI is cheaper — ruling says automation alone doesn't justify layoffs. Well then how about their entertainment industry? They're using AI for their shows, and actors are not being used as much. I see the same for the American entertainment industry.
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Doomsday for California as last barrel of oil from the Middle East arrives in Long Beach. California is in for a world of hurt due to their inept state government.
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Oregon’s Justice System Under Pressure: Shortages, Backlogs, and a Growing Demand for Accountability. Shortages everywhere, even in the legal system. Not enough competent people want to move to Oregon, and the state can't seem to produce enough competent people of their own. So systems fall apart.
This shortage has ripple effects. When defense attorneys are unavailable, cases stall. When cases stall, victims wait, evidence ages, and law enforcement resources are tied up longer than intended. Prosecutors, who depend on the movement of cases through the system, face mounting caseloads of their own. The result is a system where delays become routine rather than exceptional.