@eyesore | ||
Your thoughts ???https://joshbersin.com/2023/01/understanding-chat-gpt-and-why-its-even-bigger-than-you-think/ |
||
10
Replies
768
Views
0 Favourites
|
@obi_jon | 29 January 23 | |
I saw this a couple of days ago. http://youtu.be/GBtfwa-Fexc
|
||
@free.soul70 | 29 January 23 | |
It's fantastic. I have been outsourcing the Copywriting part of my dropshipping online business to Chatgpt and it's been producing amazing results. My sales have improved by 15 percent just by this AI even though its still in alpha state. |
||
@mikeymk | 29 January 23 | |
It has no agenda but for it's programming. I heard just yesterday about marketing intelligence that can detect illnesses based on your shopping habits. This is positive stuff. Infinite refining of efficiency could be concerning, but as long as it seeks to prevent putting people at risk then it'll always regulate within safe boundaries. |
||
@eyesore | 29 January 23 | |
I think it could be manipulated quite easily
|
||
@shadow27 | 29 January 23 | |
I keep seeing headlines about uni students here being allowed to use bots to produce papers, was going to do a topic on that.
|
||
@obi_jon | 29 January 23 | |
@ mikeymk - 29.01.23 - 01:44pm It has no agenda but for it's programming. I heard just yesterday about marketing intelligence that can detect illnesses based on your shopping habits. This is positive stuff. Infinite refining of efficiency could be concerning, but as long as it seeks to prevent putting people at risk then it'll always regulate within safe boundaries. It can't detect illnesses as such, all it does is look for certain shopping patterns that match up with the known shopping patterns of people that were previously diagnosed with a particular illness. If it notices someone buying a lot of lemsip, it will predict they might have a cold. |
||
@obi_jon | 29 January 23 | |
@ obi_jon - 29.01.23 - 04:10pm It can't detect illnesses as such, all it does is look for certain shopping patterns that match up with the known shopping patterns of people that were previously diagnosed with a particular illness. If it notices someone buying a lot of lemsip, it will predict they might have a cold. Although, the person buying the lemsips might not have a cold, they could just be buying it for someone else that does, or they may recently recovered from a cold and are just buying replacement lemsips to have in stock for the next time they're needed. |
||
@shadow27 | 30 January 23 | |
Interesting to think where it could all be headed. I remember this old Future Shock story in the 2000 AD comics. This computer at a store keeps ordering stuff they need before they even know they need it. Car accident happens outside, they already had what the people needed etc. It ends with them receiving all the items they will need to survive a nuclear holocaust. |
||
@shadow27 | 30 January 23 | |
In the case of smart cities etc what about when the AI in charge of everything gets compromised or hacked? Our over-reliance on all this tech will be our downfall.
|
||
@mikeymk | 30 January 23 | |
@ shadow27 - 30.01.23 - 02:33am Interesting to think where it could all be headed. I remember this old Future Shock story in the 2000 AD comics. This computer at a store keeps ordering stuff they need before they even know they need it. Car accident happens outside, they already had what the people needed etc. It ends with them receiving all the items they will need to survive a nuclear holocaust. We have auto-ordering for all sorts already. Some deliveries at work are based on scheduled activity, from due-in customer machine servicing to the humble office photocopier ink (though it uses UV ink amongst others). There's no reason why white goods in homes can't manage the shopping. |
||