Recent comments in /f/IAmA

jmanhalo2 t1_jaiqr9z wrote

Thank you for your input, i’m going to look into it! I do believe your right, the current home assistants seem dated in their AI tech compared to what’s available today. It’s evolving so fast so it’s understandable. I am very much looking forward to the next generation of home assistants!

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ry007opyt OP t1_jahux5a wrote

If you're willing to put in some effort, there are guides on how to use ChatGPT as your home assistant. Not sure I would trust it though. If you can wait a few months, the existing home assistants will get much much better, as none of them are currently using anything close to the state of the art AI tech (especially Siri).

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ry007opyt OP t1_jahspy2 wrote

There are several tools out there, the most well known one being Originality (full list here). OpenAI is also working on tools to fingerprint content generated through their tools. Ultimately, I don't think this is a winnable battle (students can do multiple rounds of rewriting with different tools until the fingerprint is gone). But hopefully I'm wrong. If not, the best way to handle it is to update our education system to incorporate the new tools, just like we did when calculators came along. I remember my math teacher saying "You won't always have a calculator in your pocket!". That didn't age well.

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PrecursorNL t1_jahs5zo wrote

Are there any AIs being developed that track your work as an artist and can imitate your work? Let me specify: say I'm working on a piece of music inside a DAW (digital audio workstation) and I'm clicking around adding sounds or editing etc, would there be an AI that could 'learn' the moves I do and then at some point be free to start doing some work? I'd love to see what it would come up with.. same for programs like Photoshop for instance. I think it could be really inspiring

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ry007opyt OP t1_jahr9t0 wrote

Great point. It does seem like many people are either quick to dismiss AI tools, or call for banning them (which are sort of opposite views), especially in the art community. And I can see why we might feel threatened, art has been a uniquely human activity and until recently it didn't seem like machines would be able to do it.

Recently, there has been significant progress in the Stable Diffusion community using ControlNet, which allows you to shape the subject however you want. Here's a nice demo of what I'm talking about.

Another very useful tool that increases productivity when generating art is outpainting, which allows you to generate plausible continuations of images. Works reasonably well and of course you decide what to generate.

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jmanhalo2 t1_jahr2r4 wrote

Thanks for putting in time and effort to explore 2000 different AI’s!

Is there any kind of advanced smart home assistant yet?

I’ve had google home and alexa but they are very direct as in: ask a specific question = get a specific answer. I want a more conversation type AI, where I can ask them to reword an answer or be more specific if needed. Maybe i’m just dreaming to have a Jarvis in my house, but I know it will happen eventually. Just want to know if we have one yet.

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TylerJWhit t1_jahqiop wrote

I'm not entirely sure you answered the question. We understand corporate responsibility vs. Individual responsibility. The question wasn't about the division of that responsibility (and ultimately I disagree with your conclusion on this. Personal responsibility is limited by knowledge and personal agency, and those of lower education or inclinations towards addictive tendencies may find it excessively difficult to curb social media addiction).

The question was about how you justified marketing a harmful product.

Perhaps you believed your actions themselves did not contribute to the harmful aspects of the product or that your responsibility (inability to change the negative aspects or influence on the cause) are significantly low.

In either event, I don't believe this was really answered.

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ry007opyt OP t1_jahq63e wrote

Great question! I see that your username has Spanish in it, so if you know a foreign language my best tip for you is to choose an AI that you like from There's An AI For That and build the equivalent in that language. There is a total lack of non-English AI tools and most of the demand is international.

Next best tip is to pick a super simple language generation use case (like "excuses generator") and fine-tune GPT-3 on 100 good examples on it. Most people are not bothering to fine-tune but it makes all the difference. Remember the Linkedin viral post generator? Something like that. You can use a free SEO tool like Ubersuggest to find niche ideas, and this way you'll keep getting SEO traffic once the initial buzz is over (I don't think search engines and SEO will die anytime soon).

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IAmAModBot t1_jahq2l4 wrote

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