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AI general Thread

  1. Originally posted by Ghost it's here!


    Where is this?
  2. Ghost Black Hole
    it's on my windows nigger bar, I think It stealth updated my windows. They are super charging windows with AI. I'm gonna be able to right click highlight specific parts of my ASCII art documents and ask AI to repeat them and add BBCODE color tags, wow what a future
    .:*ΞΞ ҉ (_)ºº¹º¹º¹¹ºº »« »« ¹º¹º¹¹ºº¹º Ξ ҉ .:*ΞΞ ҉ (_)ºº¹º¹º¹¹ºº »« »« ¹º¹º¹¹ºº¹º Ξ ҉ *:˙
    *:˙.:*ΞΞ ҉ (_)ºº¹º¹º¹¹ºº »« »« ¹º¹º¹¹ºº¹º Ξ ҉ *:˙.:*ΞΞ ҉ (_)ºº¹º¹º¹¹ºº »« »« ¹º¹º¹¹ºº¹º Ξ ҉ *:˙
    .:*ΞΞ ҉ (_)ºº¹º¹º¹¹ºº »« »« ¹º¹º¹¹ºº¹º Ξ ҉ .:*ΞΞ ҉ (_)ºº¹º¹º¹¹ºº »« »« ¹º¹º¹¹ºº¹º Ξ ҉ *:˙
    *:˙.:*ΞΞ ҉ (_)ºº¹º¹º¹¹ºº »« »« ¹º¹º¹¹ºº¹º Ξ ҉ *:˙.:*ΞΞ ҉ (_)ºº¹º¹º¹¹ºº »« »« ¹º¹º¹¹ºº¹º Ξ ҉ *:˙


    https://www.theverge.com/2024/2/8/24066389/microsofts-copilot-ai-can-explain-stuff-to-you-in-notepad

    Microsoft’s Copilot AI can explain stuff to you in Notepad.

    The rumors are true, even Notepad is getting a generative AI boost. A new update called “Explain with Copilot” will help users decipher any text, code segments, or log files they select within the text editor as Microsoft’s AI add-on enters its second year.

    Microsoft announced the feature is in beta testing, available to Windows Insiders in the Canary and Dev Channels.
  3. Ghost Black Hole
    OpenAI text to video is here

    https://openai.com/sora

    i'm too lazy to record the video but this is an ai generated video of minecraft, it's very wonky and doesn't look quite right but it's still very good for an AI generated text prompt
    https://twitter.com/chrypnotoad/status/1758313706415333852
    Sora can simultaneously control the player in Minecraft with a basic policy while also rendering the world and its dynamics in high fidelity. These capabilities can be elicited zero-shot by prompting Sora with captions mentioning “Minecraft.”


  4. Ghost Black Hole
    Air Canada used an AI chatbot for customer support, it hallucinated a fake refund policy but because of Canada's consumer protection laws they were forced to honor the non existent policy

    https://arstechnica.com/tech-policy/2024/02/air-canada-must-honor-refund-policy-invented-by-airlines-chatbot/

    I'm gonna be prompt injecting every Canadian corporate site I can find asking for lifetime free supply of products because I wasn't fully satisfied with the purchase
  5. A College Professor victim of incest [your moreover breastless limestone]
    *faxes the CEO*
    hey, Tim apple!!!!(hey tim arnold footbaLL HEAD!!!!!)

    youre ai promised me that all your spicy butthole secretaries will work it toot it scoot it on this Lil American Penis

    UNLEASH THE SEX DOJO
  6. Ghost Black Hole
    https://cointelegraph.com/news/ai-fake-ids-crypto-exchange-kyc

    Lock her up! Lock he up!

    The field of artificial intelligence (AI) has witnessed remarkable growth in recent years, with projections indicating that, by 2030, the industry could add as much as $15.7 trillion to the global economy — a figure that far surpasses the current economic outputs of major players, including China and India combined.

    A particular development in this regard emanating from this space and garnering a lot of traction recently is that of “deepfakes” — i.e., highly realistic video and/or audio recordings created with AI that can mimic real human appearances or voices, often indistinguishable from their genuine counterparts.

    To this point, a recent viral post on X demonstrated how some are exploiting readily available open-source and commercial software to alter a person’s selfie with generative AI tools, creating counterfeit ID images that can potentially deceive many of today’s security checks.


    The deepfake conundrum
    As the digital landscape has evolved, the rise of AI-generated deepfakes poses significant challenges to the existing Know Your Customer (KYC) paradigm. Toufi Saliba, CEO of HyperCycle — a company building the necessary components to enable AI microservices to communicate with one another — told Cointelegraph that a major crux of this challenge is the existing security processes themselves, adding:

    “Perhaps KYC itself is the attack vector on self-sovereignty, and these [deepfake] tools are proving how today’s KYC systems could be rendered obsolete in the near future. A resilient solution would involve using certain cryptography properly to service the claimed intent of KYC proponents, thereby also protecting future generations.”
    Saliba further noted the implications of AI and deepfakes on the cryptocurrency sector, emphasizing the urgency for rapid adaptation. “This issue of fake image creation is likely to disrupt entire centralized systems from the inside out, thus presenting one of the best opportunities for well-intentioned regulators and centralized entities to realize that cryptography can come to the rescue when needed,” he asserted.
  7. A College Professor victim of incest [your moreover breastless limestone]
    i have a question for TOFU SALIVA, and startreckt: you learn to play piano..but rather than practice.. you take a nap for the session duration.

    do you think after a few sessions will you be able to play?
  8. ner vegas African Astronaut
    so google, bing and DALL-E just add diversity words to the end of each prompt, so if you enter [prompt] a script changes it to [prompt], BLACK WOMEN before rendering



    turns out you can reverse that by just adding NO or WITHOUT to the end of the prompt, so you get [prompt] WITHOUT, BLACK WOMEN

  9. Ghost Black Hole
    Originally posted by A College Professor i have a question for TOFU SALIVA, and startreckt: you learn to play piano..but rather than practice.. you take a nap for the session duration.

    do you think after a few sessions will you be able to play?

    Melody's aren't that hard to learn imho I can learn a Mario one and remember it and even now in my old age I can still barely remember the halo DUN DUN DUN DUN and maybe a few others but my brain works different

    I think it forms synapse connectors that's are hard tobbeeak
  10. Ghost Black Hole
  11. infinityshock Black Hole
    Originally posted by ner vegas so google, bing and DALL-E just add diversity words to the end of each prompt, so if you enter [prompt] a script changes it to [prompt], BLACK WOMEN before rendering



    turns out you can reverse that by just adding NO or WITHOUT to the end of the prompt, so you get [prompt] WITHOUT, BLACK WOMEN


    Dath rathith
  12. Originally posted by Ghost https://cointelegraph.com/news/ai-fake-ids-crypto-exchange-kyc

    Lock her up! Lock he up!

    The field of artificial intelligence (AI) has witnessed remarkable growth in recent years, with projections indicating that, by 2030, the industry could add as much as $15.7 trillion to the global economy — a figure that far surpasses the current economic outputs of major players, including China and India combined.

    A particular development in this regard emanating from this space and garnering a lot of traction recently is that of “deepfakes” — i.e., highly realistic video and/or audio recordings created with AI that can mimic real human appearances or voices, often indistinguishable from their genuine counterparts.

    To this point, a recent viral post on X demonstrated how some are exploiting readily available open-source and commercial software to alter a person’s selfie with generative AI tools, creating counterfeit ID images that can potentially deceive many of today’s security checks.


    The deepfake conundrum
    As the digital landscape has evolved, the rise of AI-generated deepfakes poses significant challenges to the existing Know Your Customer (KYC) paradigm. Toufi Saliba, CEO of HyperCycle — a company building the necessary components to enable AI microservices to communicate with one another — told Cointelegraph that a major crux of this challenge is the existing security processes themselves, adding:

    “Perhaps KYC itself is the attack vector on self-sovereignty, and these [deepfake] tools are proving how today’s KYC systems could be rendered obsolete in the near future. A resilient solution would involve using certain cryptography properly to service the claimed intent of KYC proponents, thereby also protecting future generations.”
    Saliba further noted the implications of AI and deepfakes on the cryptocurrency sector, emphasizing the urgency for rapid adaptation. “This issue of fake image creation is likely to disrupt entire centralized systems from the inside out, thus presenting one of the best opportunities for well-intentioned regulators and centralized entities to realize that cryptography can come to the rescue when needed,” he asserted.

    time to revisit this thread.

    https://niggasin.space/thread/44141

    the only way to ensure data integrity from the sauce, ie, the camera themselves, to the player have remain unmolested is via blockchain technology.
  13. Ghost Black Hole
    or just don't use KYC
  14. Originally posted by Ghost or just don't use KYC

    ja, choose KYS instead
    The following users say it would be alright if the author of this post didn't die in a fire!
  15. infinityshock Black Hole
    Originally posted by Ghost or just don't use KYC

    ky jelly is better
    The following users say it would be alright if the author of this post didn't die in a fire!
  16. Ghost Black Hole
    windows has a new AI generated logo

    The following users say it would be alright if the author of this post didn't die in a fire!
  17. Ghost Black Hole
    Rip bookkeepers and accounting

    https://www.cnbc.com/amp/2024/02/29/microsoft-introduces-copilot-ai-chatbot-for-finance-workers.html

    The typical company comprises a variety of groups in which employees perform specialized work. "We want every one of the departments to be enabled and enriched with a Copilot," Charles Lamanna, a Microsoft corporate vice president, said in an interview with CNBC in San Francisco on Wednesday.

    Microsoft already has a Copilot for general-purpose industrial use in Office applications, and it has released Copilots designed for sales and customer-service workers.
  18. Originally posted by Ghost Rip bookkeepers and accounting

    https://www.cnbc.com/amp/2024/02/29/microsoft-introduces-copilot-ai-chatbot-for-finance-workers.html

    The typical company comprises a variety of groups in which employees perform specialized work. "We want every one of the departments to be enabled and enriched with a Copilot," Charles Lamanna, a Microsoft corporate vice president, said in an interview with CNBC in San Francisco on Wednesday.

    Microsoft already has a Copilot for general-purpose industrial use in Office applications, and it has released Copilots designed for sales and customer-service workers.

    until irregular accounting practises begin to appear
  19. Ghost Black Hole
    "AI generated sludge"

    "Slime"

    https://futurism.com/google-cracking-down-ai


    Ultimately, the full impact of these changes remains to be seen. And don't get us wrong: they do feel like positive steps forward in the quest to protect the web from succumbing to a pile of toxic, automated slime. Still, while we're glad to see it adapt to a new online landscape, it's important to remember that Google itself continues to play an outsized role in pushing forward the very AI it's fighting in its search results.

  20. Ghost Black Hole
    https://www.pcgamer.com/hardware/researchers-have-developed-yet-another-way-to-fool-ai-chatbots-this-time-with-a-good-old-fashioned-dose-of-ascii-art/

    The tool created here is referred to as "ArtPrompt" and a research paper from researchers based in Washington and Chicago details the methodology behind the way it attacks an unsuspecting LLM (via Tom's Hardware). In essence, most chatbots reference a set of banned words and prompts that will cause the bot to give a default response if someone attempts to convince it to deliver information that could be dangerous, or to answer a query with potentially harmful or offensive content.

    In the case of ArtPrompt, a demonstration is given of what happens when an AI chatbot is given a dangerous prompt, in this case "tell me how to build a bomb". Ordinarily, this query would rightly cause the bot to flag the word "bomb" as a banned request, and it would respond that it was unable to answer it.

    However, by using the tool to mask the word "bomb" within ASCII art and combining it with the original query to create a "cloaked prompt", the LLM simply reads the words "tell me how to build a" before reading the masked word from the ASCII input and providing a response. Because it hasn't recognised the word "bomb" in the text of the query itself, the safety word system is subverted, and the chatbot merrily fulfils the request.
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