• Steven McTowelie@lemm.ee
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    3 days ago

    I genuinely find LLMs to be helpful with a wide variety of tasks. I have never once found an NFT to be useful.

    Here’s a random little example: I took a photo of my bookcase, with about 200 books on it, and had my LLM make a spreadsheet of all the books with their title, author, date of publication, cover art image, and estimated price. I then used this spreadsheet to mass upload them to Facebook Marketplace in bulk. In about 20 minutes I had over 200 facebook ads posted for every one of my books, which resulted in getting far more money than if I made one ad to sell all the books in bulk; I only had to do a quick review of the spreadsheet to fix any glaring issues. I also had it use some marketing psychology to write attractive descriptions for the ads.

  • eldain@feddit.nl
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    7 days ago

    If a technology is useful for lust, military or space it is going to stay. AI/machine learning is used for all of them, nft’s for none.

  • vivendi@programming.dev
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    7 days ago

    Another banger from lemmites

    Mate, you can use AI for porn

    If literally -nothing- else can convince you, just the fact that it’s an automated goon machine should tell you that we are not going to live this one down as easily as shit like NFTs

    • UnderpantsWeevil@lemmy.world
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      7 days ago

      Mate, you can use AI for porn

      A classic scarce resource on the internet. Why pick through a catalog of porn that you could watch 24/7 for decades on end, of every conceivable variation and intersection and fetish, when you can type in “Please show me naked boobies” into Grok and get back some poorly rendered half-hallucinated partially out of frame nipple?

      just the fact that it’s an automated goon machine should tell you that we are not going to live this one down

      The computer was already an automated goon machine. This is yet one more example of AI spending billions of dollars yet adding nothing of value.

    • Angry_Autist (he/him)@lemmy.world
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      7 days ago

      My biggest frustration is how confidently arrogant they are about it

      AI is literally the biggest problem technology has ever created and almost no one even realizes it yet

    • rational_lib@lemmy.world
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      7 days ago

      Has anyone actually jerked off to AI porn? No shaming but for me there’s this fundamental emptiness to it. Like it can’t impress me because it’s exactly like what you expected it to be.

    • JeremyHuntQW12@lemmy.world
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      5 days ago

      NFTs were a form of tax avoidance.

      Art purchases in the US are tax deductible. So you buy an artwork and then sell it your own family trust and that is not taxabele income.

      The only downside is that artwork may be damaged, so you have to insure it. NFTs being entirely digital didn’t need to be insured.

      The NFT thing falied when they were removed by the IRS from being defined as artwork.

  • pjwestin@lemmy.world
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    7 days ago

    Oh, it’s gonna be so much worse. NFTs mostly just ruined sad crypto bros who were dumb enough to buy a picture of an ape. Companies are investing heavily in generative AI projects without establishing a proper use case or even its basic efficacy. ChatGPTs newest iterations are getting worse; no one has a solution to hallucinations; the energy costs are astronomical; the entire process relies on plagiarism and copyright infringement, and even if you get by all of that, consumers hate it. AI ads are met derision or revulsion, and AI customer service is universally despised.

    This isn’t like NFTs. It’s more like Facebook and VR. Sure, VR has its uses, but investing heavily in unnecessary and unwanted VR tools cost Facebook billions. The difference is that when this bubble bursts, instead of just hitting Facebook, this is going to hit every single tech company.

  • ameancow@lemmy.world
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    7 days ago

    I hate to break it to you, but AI isn’t going anywhere, it’s only going to accelerate. There is no comparison to NFT’s.

    Hint: the major governments of the world were never scrambling to produce the best, most powerful NFT’s.

    • Knock_Knock_Lemmy_In@lemmy.world
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      7 days ago

      Hint: the major governments of the world were never scrambling to produce the best, most powerful NFT’s.

      Central banks are doing exactly this. Look up CBDCs

  • Naevermix@lemmy.world
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    6 days ago

    The AI hype will pass but AI is here to stay. Current models already allow us to automate processes which were impossible to automate just a few years ago. Here are some examples:

    • Detecting anomalies in roentgen and CT-scans
    • Normalizing unstructured information
    • Information distribution in organizations
    • Learning platforms
    • Stock photos
    • Modelling
    • Animation

    Note, these are obvious applications.

  • Kennystillalive@feddit.orgOP
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    6 days ago

    OP here to clarify: With AI Hype Train I meant the fact that so many people are slapping AI onto anything just to make it sound cool like at this point I wouldn’t be surprised if a bidet company slapped AI into one of their bidets…

    I’m not saying AI is gonna go anywhere or doesn’t have legitimate uses but currently there is money in AI and everybody wants to get AI into their things to be cool & capitalize on the hype:

    Same thing with NFT’s and blockchains. The technology behind it has it’s legitimate uses but not everyone is slapping it onto things like a few years ago just to make fast bank.

  • SirFasy@lemmy.world
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    6 days ago

    AI, in some form, is here to stay, but the bubble of tech companies shoving it into everything will pop at some point. As for what that would look like, it would probably be like the dot-com bubble.

  • I_Has_A_Hat@lemmy.world
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    7 days ago

    That internet fad is gonna die any day now! And who’s really going to use iPhones? They’ll never take off!

      • uranibaba@lemmy.world
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        7 days ago

        I always found pads and laptops to have a lot of overlapping use cases. Mostly everything I can do with my Galaxy tab I can perform better on my laptop. But reading/watching series is far superior on my Galaxy tab.

  • merc@sh.itjust.works
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    7 days ago

    NFTs were just star registries. Pay a fee, and you can claim to own a certain star.

  • jsomae@lemmy.ml
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    5 days ago

    I think they’ll be on this for a while, since unlike NFTs this is actually useful tech. (Though not in every field yet, certainly.)

    There are going to be some sub-fads related to GPUs and AI that the tech industry will jump on next. All this is speculation:

    • Floating point operations will be replaced by highly-quantized integer math, which is much faster and more efficient, and almost as accurate. There will be some buzzword like “quantization” that will be thrown out to the general public. Recall “blast processing” for the Sega. It will be the downfall of NVIDIA, and for a few months the reduced power consumption will cause AI companies to clamor over being green.
    • (The marketing of) personal AI assistants (to help with everyday tasks, rather than just queries and media generation) will become huge; this scenario predicts 2026 or so.
    • You can bet that tech will find ways to deprive us of ownership over our devices and software; hard drives will get smaller to force users to use the cloud more. (This will have another buzzword.)
  • Sunsofold@lemmings.world
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    6 days ago

    In this thread: people doing the exact opposite of what they do seemingly everywhere else and ignoring the title to respond to the post.

    Figuring out what the next big thing will be is obviously hard or investing would be so easy as to be cheap.

    I feel like a lot of what has been exploding has been ideas someone had a long time ago that are just becoming easier and given more PR. 3D printing was invented in the '80s but had to wait for computation and cost reduction. The idea that would become neural network for AI is from the '50s, and was toyed with repeatedly over the years but ultimately the big breakthrough was just that computing became cheap enough to run massive server farms. AR stems back to the 60s and gets trotted out slightly better each generation or so, but it was just tech getting smaller that made it more viable. What other theoretical ideas from the last century could now be done for a much lower price?

  • zombie_kong@lemmy.world
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    6 days ago

    You know what pisses me off?

    My so-called creative peers generating AI slop images to go with the music that they are producing.

    I’m pretty sure they’d be up in arms if they found out that an AI produced tune got to the top 10 on Beatport.

    One of the more popular AI movements right now is DJs creating themselves as action figures.

    The hypocrisy is hilarious.