shawn1122

joined 5 months ago
[–] shawn1122@lemm.ee 16 points 2 weeks ago (1 children)

Was the US. That mistake is being rectified.

[–] shawn1122@lemm.ee 6 points 2 weeks ago (1 children)

They must enter a unique switch serial number (that corresponds with inventory) to make the purchase? Don't see why it has to be contigent on a subscription.

[–] shawn1122@lemm.ee 2 points 2 weeks ago* (last edited 2 weeks ago) (1 children)

America is the epicenter of the dis and misinformation distrubution machine that is social media. It was bound to be an issue eventually. Flew too close to the sun. AI/LLMs will only accelerate the process.

In hindsight, it's amazing how ready the far right was for this new means of communication. Historically the left has been younger and more tech saavy but the far right seems like they're a decade ahead of the left when it comes to spreading their propoganda on social media.

[–] shawn1122@lemm.ee 6 points 2 weeks ago* (last edited 2 weeks ago)

Vance is more protectionist than Trump. Trump has surrounded himself with a group of people who believe in American exceptionalism and isolationism like a religion.

Laura Loomer (far right conspiracy theorist who plays Jigsaw in the Saw horror film franchise) came in and advised Trump to fire National Security Agency director Gen. Timothy Haugh as well as multiple others for disloyalty, in favour of more Trump-friendly appointees.

This is usually a a step before we go full Emperor has no clothes because intelligence is supposed to be apolitical. If Trump only wants intelligence that feels good to him, then the US is truly fucked.

Its doubtful that America will recover from this. The rest of the Western world needs to figure out how to make their soft landing.

[–] shawn1122@lemm.ee 2 points 2 weeks ago* (last edited 2 weeks ago)

The vast majority of Americans allowed for this by either voting for Trump or refraining from voting at all. There is certainly some global animosity towards the American voting public, though little has been said so far, as we wait to see if the people have any sway over the global recession their choice may cause.

Most of us have come to realize that the American government does not care about the world, which is fine. But this is the first time I've seen ordinary people around the world wish economic pain upon the American people, mostly because they know it's the only reason that their government will change course.

At no point in my lifetime has America's allies wished pain upon its people. It's precedent setting and these attitudes are not going to go away overnight. Trust is a very hard to rebuild.

America's allies invoked Article 5 of the NATO agreement after the attack on September 11th, 2001. Our countrymen then put their lives on the line (some of whom died) for several questionable American led military incursions.

This is a betrayal that likely won't be forgotten in either of our lifetimes. Anyone who thinks that the US can just vote in a democrat in 2028 and everything will go back to normal is kidding themselves.

[–] shawn1122@lemm.ee 18 points 2 weeks ago* (last edited 2 weeks ago) (1 children)

This is what the ARC-AGI test by Chollet has also revealed of current AI / LLMs. They have a tendency to approach problems with this trial and error method and can be extremely inefficient (in their current form) with anything involving abstract / deductive reasoning.

Most LLMs do terribly at the test with the most recent breakthrough being with reasoning models. But even the reasoning models struggle.

ARC-AGI is simple, but it demands a keen sense of perception and, in some sense, judgment. It consists of a series of incomplete grids that the test-taker must color in based on the rules they deduce from a few examples; one might, for instance, see a sequence of images and observe that a blue tile is always surrounded by orange tiles, then complete the next picture accordingly. It’s not so different from paint by numbers.

The test has long seemed intractable to major AI companies. GPT-4, which OpenAI boasted in 2023 had “advanced reasoning capabilities,” didn’t do much better than the zero percent earned by its predecessor. A year later, GPT-4o, which the start-up marketed as displaying “text, reasoning, and coding intelligence,” achieved only 5 percent. Gemini 1.5 and Claude 3.7, flagship models from Google and Anthropic, achieved 5 and 14 percent, respectively.

https://archive.is/7PL2a

[–] shawn1122@lemm.ee 11 points 3 weeks ago* (last edited 3 weeks ago)

America pulled itself out of the great depression by becoming the worlds largest weapons manufacturer and staying out of WW2 until the very end.

They feel that they have been doing their allies a favor by having military bases in key locations that have allowed these nations to spend less than 2% of their GDP on defense.

This administration would like to reset the world order so that these countries pay for their own defense. Isolationists like JD Vance strongly believe in this.

They also know that allies will likely buy weapons from them which will help balance trade imbalances.

Here's the problem - there is no situation where this does not lead to nuclear proliferation. It's essentially inevitable if America continues down this path.

Also, when nations invest more in their militaries, they are more likely to use them, with or without adequate justification. The US is a prime example of this.

Perhaps the post WW2 period of relative peace and prosperity is about to come to an end, along with the concept of the Western world - leaving a power vacuum that I'm sure China and Russia are eager to capitalize on.

[–] shawn1122@lemm.ee 22 points 3 weeks ago (1 children)

The prayer is to capitalism

[–] shawn1122@lemm.ee 1 points 3 weeks ago* (last edited 3 weeks ago)

I wouldn't label the women as unsuspecting. We all knew who Musk was in Jan 2024. A concious choice was made to sexually engage with a terrible person. That is bound to have some unsavory reprecussions.

[–] shawn1122@lemm.ee 2 points 3 weeks ago

You better listen otherwise I'll crash my economy!

[–] shawn1122@lemm.ee 15 points 3 weeks ago* (last edited 3 weeks ago) (3 children)

I think those outside the US figured it was only a matter of time. The US voting population has only become more disengaged and the country has created and is the epicenter of most social media misinformation campaigns.

The US pulled itself out of the great depression first through regulation via the new deal and then by selling military equipment to allied nations during WW2 (essentially leveraging its geographical isolation during the war). Its been addicted to making and selling military equipment since then, in part due to the cold war but I think we can all agree there have been a few wars along the way that were essentially treated as test runs.

Hoover's nearly 50% tariff on agriculture stretched the depression out by a few years. If we take history as any indication, tariffs are typically either a buildup to complete economic collapse or to a public bailout. One of those seems more likely than the other now. What would a 21st century 'New Deal' even look like?

[–] shawn1122@lemm.ee 4 points 3 weeks ago* (last edited 3 weeks ago) (1 children)

That's certainly an oversimplification.

Science has representatives that are susceptible to the flaws in human thinking that are also apparent in religion. The recent pandemic made that very clear.

There is a scientific community that has good and bad players in it. Science doesn't get to wash itself of human corruption just because it's a process

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