Absolutely.
Somewhere between Linux woes, gaming, open source, 3D printing, recreational coding, and occasional ranting.
🇬🇧 / 🇩🇪
Absolutely.
bullshitting as in when you give a confident answer without regard of actual reality.
So you say there could be different meanings of the same word? Like “bullshitting” or “hallucination”?
LOL, okay.
LLMs bullshit all the time
Bullshitting to me is giving intentionally wrong statements. LLMs do not generate intentionally wrong statements. Saying they do, means that you imply intelligence.
LLMs know nothing nor are they intelligent. They also are not right or wrong, they generate output based on statistics.
“Hallucination” as a term for “AIs” making things up is used since the early 2000s (even if it’s meaning has changed since then).
Of course is the term stupid. Neither is an LLM an AI, nor is any AI in the current state intelligent. In the end it all boils down to being answer machines. Complex ones, but still far away from anything even remotely being am AI.
So you say, a technical term should not be created by the people who actually develop the technology the term is used for?
It’s not a “fancy word” here, but a technical term. An AI making things up is actually called hallucination.
never trust AI
Statements from LLMs are to be seen as hallucinations unless proven otherwise by classic research.
Came here to say NetGuard, too.
I did the allowlist approach and first blocked all and everything and then fiddled with the permissions and now have a good set of settings for stock Android. It’s doable within a few days while regularly using the devices and then allowing things as soon as you notice something does not work as expected.
Good, you see what I tried to imply here.
In most jurisdictions such a clause would be downright illegal and thus completely void.
There is fossil fuel advertising?
And two networks and a reverse proxy and four more volumes …
It’s absurdly complex and annoying and lacks proper documentation.
There currently is no sane way to deploy it via docker since it needs half a dozen of different containers and volumes and networks to barely work at all - overwriting/ruining your already existing setup while doing so.
The cleanest would likely be setting up a VM where you set up docker in and let Lemmy do whatever it wants.
Yeah, this one.
Sony owns THIS patent:
https://www.creativebloq.com/sony-tv-patent
And yes, it is true.