This statement combines a lot of what I think is good and less good about the thread of LLM criticism it’s from. I don’t think the stochastic parrot interpretation is more than one interesting model, I believe the relevant problems with longermism are almost completely disjoint from the ones mentioned, and I am unconvinced that marking media by consciousness of author is either philosophically clear or practically useful. However, I agree firmly with the tl;dr. https://www.dair-institute.org/blog/letter-statement-March2023
@vruba I agree with all of that. Welcome! You’re right, it is boring here. But at least we’re not lying awake in bed worried about nanobots turning us into paperclips
@tjl I think I will decline this welcome based on the recollection that you and I actually disagree very sharply about what good faith discourse on issues of corporate governance might look like.
@vruba ok. I am sorry to learn this but remain an admirer of yours
@vruba do you feel like the right magnitude comparison point might be something like smartphones?
Clearly a big deal in retrospect due to emergent aspects, and yet seemed kind of limited at the outset?
@allafarce Ish? But also in that the things people were most loudly for and against with smartphones early on were mostly not the issues I think we ought to have been focusing on.
@vruba you are not alone, here.
I continue to feel pretty alone in the interpretation that these models are neither trivial nor conscious; that they are neither nukes nor penicillin; that practically all the urgent questions about them are really the same urgent questions we’ve had about political economy, offshoring, and corporate governance for decades; and so on. I finally get to be a filthy centrist on an important issue and it turns out it’s boring.