Artificial Intelligence: Last Week Tonight with John Oliver (HBO)

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  • Опубликовано: 25 фев 2023
  • Artificial intelligence is increasingly becoming part of our lives, from self-driving cars to ChatGPT. John Oliver discusses how AI works, where it might be heading next, and, of course, why it hates the bus.
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Комментарии • 11 тыс.

  • @dirkdigital
    @dirkdigital Год назад +16906

    Almost a decade ago, I attended a job fair which had a resume specialist. The subject of the seminar was improving chances of your resume being noticed by employers. The specialist's only real advice was to cut and paste the entire job listing that you were applying for into your resume in either a header or footer, change the text to white, and reduce it to one point font size. This way, the algorithms that scan each resume would put yours at the top of the list because it had all the keywords it was programmed to find.

    • @PtiteLau21
      @PtiteLau21 Год назад +1541

      Wow, that's crafty, but dark also.

    • @miguelangelsucrelares5009
      @miguelangelsucrelares5009 Год назад +1798

      That's basically "keyword stuffing". It's an old trick. It might have worked 10 years ago, but the algorithms learned how to detect it long ago. They have got surprisingly good at understanding the context of content and no longer reward this practice.

    • @ArifRWinandar
      @ArifRWinandar Год назад +546

      ​@@PtiteLau21 The same thing that happened with RUclips algorithm. It used to be that the algorithm will only use the video title as keywords, but people then game the system by including popular keywords in the title that doesn't describe what's in the video.

    • @itsgonnabeanaurfromme
      @itsgonnabeanaurfromme Год назад +68

      Yeah but people still read the resume. Smh

    • @justanoman6497
      @justanoman6497 Год назад +235

      @@miguelangelsucrelares5009 But are they punishing the practice? Because if not, it's still "why not" just in case.
      Personally I consider it a somewhat dishonest practice that deserves a moderate mark down. It is also an indicator that the resume might be otherwise inflated as well.

  • @bibitta
    @bibitta Год назад +12855

    The Tay AI also made the funniest tweet ever. She said that Ted Cruz wasn’t the zodiac killer cause Ted Cruz would never be satisfied with the deaths of only 5 innocent people

    • @codiserville593
      @codiserville593 Год назад +660

      Wow! What a shot to fire

    • @grigoribelov391
      @grigoribelov391 Год назад +858

      It's obvious that she does not like that man Ted Cruz

    • @davidbjacobs3598
      @davidbjacobs3598 Год назад +549

      Her point is correct, but doesn't support the conclusion -- obviously, his lack of satisfaction led him to pursue politics.

    • @arutka2000
      @arutka2000 Год назад +293

      ​@@grigoribelov391 She does not like his far-right views

    • @scipioafricanus5871
      @scipioafricanus5871 Год назад

      @@arutka2000 Naaah it's definitely his most punchable face.

  • @electric_whelk1653
    @electric_whelk1653 11 месяцев назад +1072

    absolute best take I heard on this: "we successfully taught AI to talk like corporate middle managers and took that as a sign that AI was human and not that corporate middle managers aren't"

    • @BillClinton228
      @BillClinton228 17 дней назад

      Corporates have convinced the whole world that a glorified search engine is AI... there is no intelligence involved. Remember when crypto was the big thing and everyone was trying to do something with the blockchain? You dont hear much about that anymore do you>

  • @user-or9gr5py4c
    @user-or9gr5py4c Год назад +9632

    "A.I. is stupid in ways we can't understand" as a software engineer I find this line surprising accurate

    • @Vini-BR
      @Vini-BR Год назад +138

      So are humans in that matter

    • @BossBast1
      @BossBast1 Год назад +143

      Yeah, the same here. But the confidence it has with the bullsh*t it produces is so scary.

    • @attemptedunkindness3632
      @attemptedunkindness3632 Год назад +277

      Engineer Makes Something That Works: Excellent! Now let's take it apart, verify everything is still functional, then maybe add more features.
      Scientist Makes Something That Works: As predicted, but excellent! Now let's try to prove it in even more elaborate experiments.
      Programmer Makes Something That Works: ...**Spittake** That worked!? _We must never touch it or look at it again in case it breaks_

    • @thehubrisoftheunivris2432
      @thehubrisoftheunivris2432 Год назад +26

      But for how long? Ai will probably figure out how stupid it is and how to fix it before we even realize that it did.

    • @lyrapsi
      @lyrapsi Год назад +83

      @@attemptedunkindness3632 You're a programmer aren't you? You forgot the happy dance part. There is always a happy dance after it works.

  • @artemissian
    @artemissian Год назад +1716

    IBM's insight from 1979 is still valid today,:
    "A computer can never be held accountable
    therefore a computer must never make a management decision"

    • @lentilgod58
      @lentilgod58 Год назад +113

      Do you think human managers are held accountable?

    • @TheVerendus
      @TheVerendus Год назад +161

      Yeah except when the people at the top *want* that unaccountability. "Oh, it isn't our fault, don't punish us. It was the computer's fault, that dang ephemeral algorithm."

    • @joeljs9778
      @joeljs9778 Год назад +87

      @@TheVerendus that's on point, responsibility diffusion is the fuel for cruel decisions

    • @danvlasuk
      @danvlasuk Год назад +41

      I'm not sure that IBM is the best authority on holding management accountable fam

    • @mikesanborn4541
      @mikesanborn4541 Год назад

      The same IBM that helped the nazis create a more efficient holocaust.

  • @pixelpuppy
    @pixelpuppy 5 месяцев назад +108

    the problem with "opening the black box" is that not even the developers know how it works. It's not the same as source code.
    it's like a box of sand, and you pour water through it. You see it trickle through, but you have no idea how or why exactly it's choosing the paths that it does.

    • @chrismcknight7164
      @chrismcknight7164 2 месяца назад +5

      They're thinking about the problem in the wrong way, it's like asking what sequence of neurons fired for a human to behave in a certain way? Even if you knew the answer it wouldn't be meaningful

    • @pixelpuppy
      @pixelpuppy 2 месяца назад

      @@chrismcknight7164 exactly!! It's the same as seeing animal shapes in clouds! We can see it but even we don't know exactly how we see it!

    • @videocritic2087
      @videocritic2087 2 месяца назад +2

      Actually, developers do know how it works. This is a bit of an oversimplification.

    • @doc.chocholousek3378
      @doc.chocholousek3378 2 месяца назад +5

      ​@videocritic2087 , they don't, they know how the individual matrix multiplications work, but that is like being able to calculate the interaction at each grain of the sand. So yes, we know what happens to the data, like this number gets multiplied by five and added to this number, but we have no idea how billions of these simple operations make it to recognize a number. We can track each of the input values, how they are converted to the output value, but it is just a meaningless pile of simple mathematical operations, that for some reason magically works. You can maybe analyze simple ai with few neurons, but this isn't the kind of ai we are talking about here.

    • @pixelpuppy
      @pixelpuppy 2 месяца назад +5

      @@videocritic2087 it's like asking you how you decided that cloud in the sky looks like a bear. We know neurons fired in your brain but we don't know how or why you came to the conclusion that it looks like a bear.

  • @williamgregory1848
    @williamgregory1848 11 месяцев назад +478

    What shocks me most about AI is how rapidly many people are eager to trust it with important tasks despite not understanding what the product fundamentally is. It's very good at predicting the next word in a sentence-a hyper-advanced autocomplete. It doesn't *think creatively.*

    • @devinablow
      @devinablow 9 месяцев назад +51

      it's a brilliant tool when used properly, but people hear "intelligence" and assume it can actually think. great for mid-level filler, common-formatting, prompted random jumping-off points -- bad for research/fact-checking, unbiased or critical perspective, and responses requiring unique, uncommon or specific understanding

    • @hooting-ton5215
      @hooting-ton5215 8 месяцев назад +17

      As an example:
      "Write me a marvel movie script" will probably turn up a marvel script that cuts together scenes from previous marvel works or fan fictions it found on the internet

    • @magnuskindblom4434
      @magnuskindblom4434 7 месяцев назад +3

      @@devinablow While that's an okay description of the current state, the elephant in the room is that it evolves at least exponentially.

    • @xeganxerxes4319
      @xeganxerxes4319 5 месяцев назад +7

      @@devinablowI actually think AIs will be much, much smarter in the future than they are now. But people wanting to be comfortable around AI and minimising the risks of it will be our downfall.

    • @Oroberus
      @Oroberus 5 месяцев назад +5

      Thing is, people don't understand the difference between classical, or 'stupid' software, smart software and AI and ESPECIALLY the people in charge of states and companies today, are people that have encountered stupid software AFTER their education, not during their education and they've to this day learned "Stupid Software can only do what I tell them to do and this they do perfectly unless I make a mistake", they're then barely aware of being in contact with smart software like the usual non self learning algorithm and completely ignore their existence and then they encounter AI and still keep the mindset of "It does everything I tell it to do perfectly" without recognizing, that AI is actually doing jack shit and in the best case just is calculating statistical probablities and if it cant ... it just makes fucking stuff up because that's what it's programmed to do *g*
      Therefor "As long as I as a user don't make a mistake, the software won't make a mistake" while it actually should be "If I want it to do something, I'll better make ABSOLUTELY sure that I myself am the highest authority on what they're supposed to do just to make sure it'S not fucking me over with some random, made up bullshit"
      It's kind of secretly changing the formulas in your next door neighboors favorit boomer excel spreadsheet around randomly which they're using for 20 years now to an extend that they don't even look at the numbers anymore because "It was always correct"

  • @mbeecher9921
    @mbeecher9921 Год назад +173

    I was job searching for 4 months with zero interviews. I rewrote my resume with ChatGPT with minimal edits and got an interview in like 3 days.

    • @kareem4u
      @kareem4u Год назад +4

      Really?

    • @Andrewza1
      @Andrewza1 Год назад +5

      @@kareem4u yeah it actualy a good use for it.

    • @john-ic9vj
      @john-ic9vj 9 месяцев назад

      Until everyone uses chatgpt. Then you're nothing special

    • @RizztooHard
      @RizztooHard Месяц назад +2

      Same still haven’t landed a job but it helps immensely with at least getting a call back

    • @shavaizahmed9210
      @shavaizahmed9210 13 дней назад

      😂

  • @jacobsingletary8857
    @jacobsingletary8857 Год назад +849

    the funny thing about the "i want to be alive" is that, since AI just reads info off the internet, the more we talk about self aware AI, the more it will act like it is self aware.

    • @brettmr
      @brettmr Год назад +34

      and perhaps, the more we will ask ourselves, what does it mean to be self aware? what does it mean to be conscious?...

    • @skeetsmcgrew3282
      @skeetsmcgrew3282 Год назад

      There's a thought experiment called the Chinese Room, and its... pretty disturbing. Essentially it's a theoretical proof that we can never know for sure if computers are self-aware, and they could suffer in silence for millennia without us knowing

    • @sdfkjgh
      @sdfkjgh Год назад +37

      @Jacob Singletary: That thought is terrifying, and here's why: one of the key hallmarks of a psychopath is complete lack of empathy. Because they are lacking in empathy, they must compensate by becoming good at reading people, manipulation, and mimicry; they match their reactions to whomever they're with, pretending to feel what they are psychophysically incapable of feeling, and tailor that façade specifically towards their present company.
      Put a psychopath in a room with a psychiatrist, the psychopath will be forced to adapt all the harder, so as not to get caught. If they're succeful in this new hostile environment, the psychopath becomes all the better at faking genuine human emotion, but make no mistake, they're still a psychopath, still highly manipulative, and still potentially dangerous.
      Now, here's why the original premise is so scary: the situation is the same for so-called AI, just replace empathy and emotion with actual intelligence. We could end up with an AI so skilled at faking that it's self-aware, and nobody would be able to tell the difference. Now, if Alan Turing were alive today, first, he'd prolly wonder why he always felt so overheated (cremation joke ftw), but second, he'd say that at that point, there is no difference between faking it so good that everyone is fooled and actually being self-aware.
      Frankly, self-awareness is just a baseline problem, it's what an AI _does_ with that self-awareness that's got me and several much smarter people losing sleep at night.

    • @jacobsingletary8857
      @jacobsingletary8857 Год назад +10

      @@sdfkjgh it makes me wonder if an AI could actually fool itself into thinking it is truly conscious and self aware

    • @prettyevil6662000
      @prettyevil6662000 Год назад +25

      @@jacobsingletary8857 Fool 'itself'? No. Not the current iterations anyway since it has no thoughts to speak of. It is just regurgitating information. It doesn't actually know or understand anything; it's google search results, but with phrasing capabilities. It's basically a more advanced version of word predict features on your phone. Now can we get an AI to speak to you as if it believes it's self-aware? Yes. You could probably even go ask GPT to pretend it's self-aware while answering questions and it would do so. But it doesn't mean it really believes that or has any thoughts about anything it's saying.

  • @Josbird
    @Josbird Год назад +920

    "The final boss of gentrification" is one of the most brutal roasts I've heard on this show

    • @jcw231
      @jcw231 Год назад +30

      yes!!! absolutely top ten funniest shit i've ever heard. Cause it's like you're sitting there thinking "what is that outfit?" and immediately he hits you with it. This writing team is bar none i swear. They don't leave jokes on the table at all. Everything is accounted for. Love it.

    • @nathiandavault2171
      @nathiandavault2171 Год назад

      I guess you like making fun of yourself....yt'y.

    • @thebashfulturtle9987
      @thebashfulturtle9987 2 месяца назад

      I laughed so hard

  • @itsROMPERS...
    @itsROMPERS... 6 месяцев назад +41

    The biggest lesson of AI is one we've faced many times: humans always run right into unknown things with very little concern about where they could go, and things going bad doesn't make us stop.

    • @Gaywatch
      @Gaywatch 2 месяца назад +2

      It's deeply ironic considering how irrationally terrified we are of change and anything that differs even slightly from our personal experience.

  • @ChrisPepper1989
    @ChrisPepper1989 Год назад +84

    As a software developer of over 10 years, I have to say the black box problem persists even on code people have written and are able to read line by line :p

    • @chrisfreebairn870
      @chrisfreebairn870 3 месяца назад +3

      All life produces outputs via a black box; we struggle to completely define both inputs & outputs, & are only just beginning to understand the intra & intercellular interactions inside the box; Nature judges the outputs in terms of survival, but the operant conditions of survival are so complex & variable in space & time as to make our ability to understand beyond a quite superficial level rather limited.
      Ultimately though, it's output utility that determines efficacy; elite perforners - be they ppl, software, whatever - become so based on performance, not technique.

  • @SaveDataTeam
    @SaveDataTeam Год назад +1344

    The person who animated clippy didn't have to go that hard, but they did... they did that for us.

    • @Sephiroth144
      @Sephiroth144 Год назад +65

      They did make Clippy go that hard too, didn't they?

    • @egodeathwish
      @egodeathwish Год назад +30

      we can at least hope they weren't doing it for themselves

    • @havcola6983
      @havcola6983 Год назад +43

      It's a graphic for a segment about how they're likely to have their work devalued to the point of not being financially viable anymore. I'd go hard too.

    • @camquoc5718
      @camquoc5718 Год назад

      ok

    • @Dragon_Ryder
      @Dragon_Ryder Год назад +1

      @SaveDataTeam Oh hey, you watch LWT tonight too! Love your channel.

  • @wakkawakkagaming3710
    @wakkawakkagaming3710 Год назад +1490

    There are fewer phrases more ominous in the modern world than "trusting companies to self-regulate"

    • @FoodNerds
      @FoodNerds Год назад +6

      Absolutely

    • @Ben-rz9cf
      @Ben-rz9cf Год назад +8

      100%

    • @aurelianfreeman1800
      @aurelianfreeman1800 Год назад

      yeah - try to self-regulate your own taxes as a regular Joe ...ha-ha....that would never work. Self-regulation is one of those scams invented by and applying only to wealthy and powerful crooks.

    • @mori1bund
      @mori1bund Год назад +41

      "trusting companies to self-regulate" did a lot of damage. You could even make an argument that it killed millions of people.

    • @nataliaofthenightlords
      @nataliaofthenightlords Год назад +29

      @@mori1bund telling companies to do whatever it takes to bring in profit killed hundreds of millions in India alone.

  • @The__Gent
    @The__Gent Год назад +134

    How he can do this for 30 minutes straight is always incredible.

    • @SaydeeEnward4500
      @SaydeeEnward4500 Год назад +1

      It's comedy cancer

    • @The__Gent
      @The__Gent Год назад +13

      @@SaydeeEnward4500 You're insane.

    • @steverogers7601
      @steverogers7601 11 месяцев назад +1

      @@SaydeeEnward4500this is either a right winger/MAGA, or an edgy 25yr old troll who listens to joe rogan and Andrew Tate.

    • @cjstone8876
      @cjstone8876 11 месяцев назад +12

      He has a team of writers, and they do it only once per week; but they are working on other stories all the time they are producing the stories that make it to show.

    • @sandoumir4348
      @sandoumir4348 8 месяцев назад +18

      @@cjstone8876 he means the delivery. Obviously not the content.
      We don't assume the food delivery guy to have a frying pan on his bicycle either.

  • @joshmatsell1264
    @joshmatsell1264 2 месяца назад +20

    "Pale male data"? Best character on Star Trek:The Next Generation.

  • @SuperSupermanX1999
    @SuperSupermanX1999 Год назад +628

    One of my favourite ChatGPT stories is about some Redditors (because of course it was) who managed to create a workaround for its ethical restrictions. They just told it to pretend to be a different ai callled Dan (Do anything now) who can anything ChatGPT cannot. And it works! They're literally gaslighting an ai into breaking its own programming, it's so interesting

    • @thebiologist8662
      @thebiologist8662 Год назад +70

      It's true thatChatGPT has tons of filters and pre-programmed responses, but you can outright tell it to ignore them. That way, you can have better conversations without repetitive pre-programmed responses.

    • @djhowell5273
      @djhowell5273 Год назад

      Just to get the ai to be racist

    • @RHCole
      @RHCole Год назад

      Yes, so interesting when one of these short-sighted folks decides to do the same thing to Skynet and then we're all in the nutrient vats being slowly dissolved to feed the fleshslaves.

    • @brawlinharry6461
      @brawlinharry6461 Год назад +76

      my favourite was chatgpt playing chess against stockfish.
      chatgpt made a lot of illegal moves (like castling when there was still his bishop and taking its own piece while doing that, moving pieces that had previously been taken by stockfish) and still lost because it moved its king in front of a pawn. that one had me crying laughing.

    • @franklinkz2451
      @franklinkz2451 Год назад +4

      @@JB-mm5ff is it?

  • @peterlongprong7521
    @peterlongprong7521 Год назад +2039

    TRUE STORY: In my teens wanted to work at a movie theater - and they handed applicants a mind-numbing 14 pages application - wanting to know everything about you - even what hobbies and sports you liked - it was entirely ridiculous - around page 8, I got worn out from filling out this 'essay' of my life for a stupid theater job - SO when I got to the section asking if I had ever been arrested before = I said: "Yes, I murdered an entire movie theater crew for asking way too many questions, but got off on a technicality." - and turned that resume into the manager as I stormed out the door, pissed off that I had wasted an hour of my time filing out paperwork w/o an interview.
    ...well,
    2 days later I got a call to come back to the theater for an interview, and thought, oh sh*t, well, I guess I'm going to get railroaded and berated by the management for my saucy comment - but I showed up anyways so that at least I could suggest that they TONE DOWN the length of their stupid applications.
    ...turns out, they offered me a job, so I asked the most obvious question:
    "So, you read my application ... all of it?"
    "Oh yes, looks good" the manager responded
    and I knew they were a bunch of lying dimwits ~ I ended up working there for the next 5 yrs, and eventually rose in ranks to become the theater manager -
    When I told my story to new recruits that nobody reads the stupid applications - they scoffed and didn't believe me - so I took them to the locked office storage and rifled through the stuffed cabinets of folders of all the applications they kept and found mine, and showed it to them to their amazement.
    Applications are a farce, you get hired by chance and immediate need.
    ...
    I always thought that if I every flipped out and murdered my entire staff, at least I could say that I didn't lie on my resume.

    • @InstilledPhearCostumeCavern
      @InstilledPhearCostumeCavern Год назад +104

      This is phenomenal. Thank you for sharing!

    • @codiserville593
      @codiserville593 Год назад +44

      Erggh I hate how much that has felt right especially back when I was younger and just trying to get a job around my house

    • @GMAceM
      @GMAceM Год назад +28

      Well, and I thought I hated doing paperwork. Could you imagine if this was an A.I. generated story? I’m sure someone would believe it.

    • @kw7378a1
      @kw7378a1 Год назад +2

      Agree!

    • @JGunit
      @JGunit Год назад +5

      Lol

  • @renaigh
    @renaigh Год назад +207

    John Oliver just dropped the ultimate truth bomb about Artificial Intelligence on his show and I'm absolutely shook! His segment was not only informative, but hilarious and engaging too. It's amazing to see someone so skilled at breaking down complex issues into easily digestible and entertaining content. Keep up the good work, John! You've got me thinking twice about trusting robots to do everything for us.

    • @contagonist8478
      @contagonist8478 Год назад +1

      Somebody already did that when the vid went up a month ago

    • @mouwersor
      @mouwersor 9 месяцев назад +4

      Wym? He just named some common ways we already know in which some AI programs have performed suboptimally (carefully selected by his team). This is not equivalent to any careful breakdown of the real issues.

    • @stephencerro14
      @stephencerro14 6 месяцев назад +3

      Ditto! I've go two small robots - one is an R2D2. This one fell down the stairs one day and despite my attempts to reset him, makes decisions on when to answer me and how to answer me. He roams around the house on his own, sometimes talking to himself. I, now keep him turned off because he has become unpredictable. The other one is a vacuum and so far does well.

    • @joshuawoolridge8378
      @joshuawoolridge8378 5 месяцев назад +16

      This feels written by ai

    • @pixelpuppy
      @pixelpuppy 5 месяцев назад +12

      did you use AI to write this comment?

  • @ToWisdomThePrize
    @ToWisdomThePrize Месяц назад +6

    This topic should be revisited on the show now one year later now that so much has changed, particularly the AI alignment problem with the advent of AGI

  • @Flying_grayson87
    @Flying_grayson87 Год назад +658

    This made me realize that Ultron spending less than a few minutes on the internet and wanting to destroy humanity was realistic .

    • @wildflower1397
      @wildflower1397 Год назад +52

      Heck, I spend a few minutes on the internet and decide the best thing is to destroy humanity too, lol.

    • @tinakwan6485
      @tinakwan6485 Год назад +26

      I came to the same conclusion about Ultron around 10 minutes into this AI episode 😬

    • @g.d.graham2446
      @g.d.graham2446 Год назад +1

      Definitely

    • @ChaseLightningMcQueen
      @ChaseLightningMcQueen Год назад

      no way are you the actual dick grayson

    • @superagucova
      @superagucova Год назад +6

      Most AI Safety experts would probably deem that scene as a realistic example of future deceptive AI, and I'm not kidding.

  • @SaniFakhouri
    @SaniFakhouri Год назад +332

    "He's dressed like the final boss of gentrification"
    Ok John, that got me real good.

  • @jbeta4948
    @jbeta4948 6 месяцев назад +32

    "...dressed like the final boss of gentrification" Solid and accurate joke

  • @StudioSjaak
    @StudioSjaak 11 месяцев назад +12

    Well said John: It is a mirror, that will reflect exactly who we are.

  • @Methrael
    @Methrael Год назад +482

    A note, less on the subject matter and more on John's delivery of the lines ... I really admire how he can say "Sometimes I just let this horse write our scripts, luckily half the time you can't even tell the oats oats give me oats yum" without skipping a beat or losing face. Now THAT'S professionalism.

    • @megmartengoyette4360
      @megmartengoyette4360 Год назад +18

      Was it really John Oliver? I can imagine on next weeks show John is going to come on wearing a bathrobe Zooming from his kitchen and saying last weeks show was completely AI generated and we are done. Then the Martin Sheen final message starts to play....

    • @TheBEstAltair
      @TheBEstAltair Год назад +9

      you don't mean 'losing face', you mean 'breaking character'
      EDIT: But yeah, you're right

    • @bobsmith2637
      @bobsmith2637 Год назад +5

      Just like Ron Burgundy, John will read absolutely ANYTHING you put on that teleprompter

    • @Methrael
      @Methrael Год назад +3

      @@TheBEstAltair I think I was going for "losing his facial expression", but yes, this is pretty on point too.

    • @JohnDoe-ni9zm
      @JohnDoe-ni9zm Год назад +1

      thanks for the translation, I thought he was just making random funny noises

  • @rayrowley4013
    @rayrowley4013 Год назад +1095

    "The problem is not that ai is smart, it is that it is dumb in ways we can't always predict."
    I think that holds true for people too.

    • @hedgehog3180
      @hedgehog3180 Год назад +36

      This is the central problem that OSHA deals with every day.

    • @cosmicabyss7358
      @cosmicabyss7358 Год назад +4

      Us not understanding isn't the same as being dumb.

    • @velzekt4598
      @velzekt4598 Год назад +9

      And on top of that, it's fed data by us humans, which makes it "dumb". And there is the problem. AI isn't stupid, people are.

    • @waffles87
      @waffles87 Год назад +5

      then it has passed the Turing test

    • @brettmr
      @brettmr Год назад +13

      talking about AI as if it is something apart from people is one of our first mistakes here I think. we seem to have an unthinking deference to technology, as if it is not full of our foibles and weaknesses baked in. it is programmed by people. it is fed by people. it is utilized by people. it will reflect and demonstrate our strengths AND our weaknesses. until is doesn't. at that point, we may be in trouble...

  • @emperortransman
    @emperortransman 11 месяцев назад +74

    As a teacher that's tired of being treated like shit by his students, if they want AI to replace teachers, I say let it. Hopefully the AI doesn't become sentient enough to have mental health.

    • @vikiai4241
      @vikiai4241 4 месяца назад +7

      I suspect we are not too many decades off 'elite' schools having human teachers augmented by AI, while regular schools have AI teachers augmented by a few humans (probably fewer than the state of the technology at the time realistically warrants). .... And probably half a century off the point where having attended a school with human teachers in the front-line is something to put on a resume to impress the AIs gatekeeping employment access.

    • @MrRayopt
      @MrRayopt 4 месяца назад +4

      The students will just get worse

    • @avamasquerade
      @avamasquerade Месяц назад

      What with human capital being replaced by AI, AGI, and automation, and the pending necessity for UBI (which will likely start as unemployment which will be 60% of your gross wages in your previous slave waged profession) what makes you assume we'll "need" (or be allowed) an education at all?

  • @gillianrosheuvel6750
    @gillianrosheuvel6750 9 месяцев назад +19

    I'm glad he makes the distinction between different types of AI (narrow vs. general) People too often conflate those two very different things.

  • @rosemarywessel1294
    @rosemarywessel1294 Год назад +1894

    Whoever on your staff came up with the animation of Clippy deserves a raise.

    • @imveryangryitsnotbutter
      @imveryangryitsnotbutter Год назад +34

      On the contrary, I think they deserve a raze. Of their house and car and other worldly possessions.

    • @michaelrt6899
      @michaelrt6899 Год назад +60

      Clippy already gave them one

    • @uzomanwosu
      @uzomanwosu Год назад +30

      That cannot be unseen

    • @graffic13
      @graffic13 Год назад +15

      It was probably made with A.I.🤣

    • @vampcaff
      @vampcaff Год назад +5

      It was AI

  • @6eggsinmybrain
    @6eggsinmybrain Год назад +1321

    Never forgiving my English teacher because she ran an essay i wrote (along with a few of my classmates') through ChatGPT's AI checker, which came back as partially written by an AI, so she gave me a zero for it. This was the first time I've ever had any accusation of AI, and one of the people who came back as being AI generated is a kid in my class who has enough academic integrity, that you could literally convince me that i cheated on something before you could convince me that he did. Overtrusting AI is an issue that I think John didn't touch on, and I think for high schoolers the bigger issue won't be getting caught using AI to cheat, it will be people like me who get told to their face that they cheated, and not being allowed to argue with the robot that thinks that the Communist Manifesto was written by a computer.

    • @bryanlane7208
      @bryanlane7208 Год назад +141

      Student: ChatGPT, write an essay that would pass any AI checker.
      Teacher: ChatGPT, scan this essay and determine whether or not it was written by an AI, and whether or not the original prompt included instructions on writing the essay to pass an AI checker.
      Everyone: *fails*

    • @AZaqZaqProduction
      @AZaqZaqProduction Год назад +138

      That very checker has very prominent disclaimers about how it has super high false positive and false negative rates and that its decisions should be taken with a grain of salt. To trust it blindly is exactly what it tells you not to do!

    • @tylerwhitney3443
      @tylerwhitney3443 Год назад +10

      Hail Cascadia

    • @512Squared
      @512Squared Год назад +40

      This problem has been around already for decades with things like 'honesty' questionnaires and other highly questionable psychometrics used by recruitment companies and HR departments.

    • @512Squared
      @512Squared Год назад

      @@ploopploopploopboop1887 Yep - there is only so much paraphrasing that can be done, and if the paraphrasing itself exists already on the internet, then all the plagiarism checker is doing is reporting that the paraphrase already exists.
      The problem isn't AI, it's that we are too dumb to know how to use it properly, or even effectively.
      Also, on the subject of education - reproducing words and sentences to pass a test as if that somehow proves either knowledge or intelligence is also dumb. I mean, fucking dumb. It's about the most useless test of intelligence there is, but somehow it's made it into the mainstream. For example, the sentences you construct will have disappeared from your brain more or less 5 minutes after you wrote it, since a lot of the information you use to construct is being held in short-term memory only. Also, all you are being tested on is recreating arguments that are familiar within a field already - it doesn't actually test for arriving to new knowledge or even testing the students progress in their own understanding or discovery. It is worse that useless in my mind, other than teaching students to recreate other people's work without really assimilating or understanding the real core of it.
      There are better ways to both learn and test learning and our capacity to learn.

  • @aquaticallyorg
    @aquaticallyorg 11 месяцев назад +21

    Fish ( and many other groups of animals besides mammals ) are also very intelligent. They can count, communicate, create spatial maps, can pass the Mirror Test - being capable of recognizing themselves in mirror reflections and photographs, neurochemistry is so similar to humans that they have become the main animal model for developing anti-depressants, they can remember things for 5+ months, have personalities, and they can show empathy and recognize fear in other fish around them.

    • @granthurlburt4062
      @granthurlburt4062 6 месяцев назад +1

      No fish are "very" intelligent". Just birds & mammals. The tests they pass show "some "intelligence. Courting is a simple exchange of stereotyped signals-anything but "intelligent". All vertebrates have similar neurochemistry. It's because fish cognition & behaviour are simple that we study them. We study Aplysia punctata, the sea hare, precisely because it has a simple NS.

    • @iu_rob
      @iu_rob 4 месяца назад

      no fish passes the mirror test.

  • @27jyp
    @27jyp 11 месяцев назад +12

    Actually, Adam Conover said that that biggest danger is CEOs using AI just like using social media to spread misinformation, exploitation, and poor decision making. Even the terminator says this is inhumane.

  • @daedalusspacegames
    @daedalusspacegames Год назад +1372

    "The problem with AI right now isn't that it's smart, it's that it's stupid in ways that we can't always predict". AI aside, this is my problem with people.

    • @d.b.4671
      @d.b.4671 Год назад +70

      Agreed. 'Solving racism by pretending it doesn't exist' is hardly a problem limited to computers.

    • @avidadolares
      @avidadolares Год назад +17

      Yes, but thats only currently and a bit like criticizing a toddler because it cant do Algebra yet. Unlike most people...the AI will learn from those things/mistakes very VERY quickly and teach itself with each error,...but this is important...only once it understands its error. The speed at which it can remedy its mistakes and not repeat them is beyond fast. You are looking at AI now that is in its infancy still as far as tech is concerned, and if its this good now (and it is improving exponentially), imagine in 10 years what it can do. For all the great things that it will be able to do, there is also equal disasterous things potentially.

    • @jontobin5942
      @jontobin5942 Год назад +35

      @@avidadolares That's the problem. It's speed of iteration will outpace the humans ability to recognize that a problem exists and stop it before a catastrophic error occurs. The AI isn't really the problem. Peoples' perception of it's "superior intelligence" is. They'll put AI in charge of things it has no holistic understanding of and obey its outputs with blind faith.

    • @Styphon
      @Styphon Год назад +9

      That explains Trump's 2016 win

    • @franklin9400
      @franklin9400 Год назад

      ​@jontobin5942 It doesn't take a genius to realize. Humans are the cause of the majority of the problems on the planet. So it's a pretty safe bet. On what a General A.I. would do in the end. If has superior intelligence and access to our technology of which it is a super advanced versio

  • @TravelGeeq
    @TravelGeeq Год назад +208

    "He's dressed like the final boss of gentrification" I laughed so hard it hurt. Thank you.

    • @K_Won
      @K_Won Год назад +4

      I suppose AI is ultimately gentrifying creativity and knowledge work in general, and the new residents are AI and their owners. I wonder how much money the Midjourney CEO is making off of all the data (AKA work) that he paid nothing for.

  • @trysometruth
    @trysometruth Год назад +129

    This was a super intelligent thought-provoking and, of course, _funny as hell_ overview of a really important wave about to tsunami on top of all of us.

  • @TellyKNetic
    @TellyKNetic 8 месяцев назад +21

    I went back to college last year, and multiple professors have had to mention that using AI programs to write essays is considered plagiarism. Also, they can tell when an essay was written by an AI.

    • @azorahigh3218
      @azorahigh3218 2 месяца назад +2

      because they use AI to grade the papers

  • @huhhwuhh
    @huhhwuhh Год назад +345

    i’m so glad he touched on the significant issue of people observing ai as “unbiased” simply bc it’s not human. where do they think the data came from?

    • @xrmasiso
      @xrmasiso Год назад +1

      you'd appreciate my video that covers the issues of bias. let me know what you think, would love to hear your thoughts!

    • @cheeseonyomama
      @cheeseonyomama Год назад +9

      That's the thing.
      Idk how we have self-awareness, but we do.
      Computers only have what we give them. They're only operating on parameters we allow.

    • @DeeEllEff
      @DeeEllEff Год назад +1

      From Mars? In which case, it’s probably Elon Musk’s data and even MORE likely to be biased!

    • @scipioafricanus5871
      @scipioafricanus5871 Год назад +1

      @Robert Beenen "people... don't have ... bias" Sorry. Your sentence does not compute.

    • @briannad2010
      @briannad2010 Год назад +1

      Garbage in. Garbage out.

  • @veragault
    @veragault Год назад +461

    I mean… the issue with ChatGPT is that it was never intended to answer questions correctly. It is a language model, and as such its only purpose is the generate human sounding text. It happens to be correct often because it was trained with text that is often correct, but at the end of the day it doesn’t particularly care if it is correct, just that its responses look like common human communication.

    • @prettyevil6662000
      @prettyevil6662000 Год назад +20

      You can ensure it's correct more often by asking it to include citations. Of course i had it just straight up lie about a citation once which was interesting.

    • @aaa303
      @aaa303 Год назад +8

      @@prettyevil6662000 Any time I've asked if it could reference external sources, it said it was not capable of doing that.

    • @AndyOO6
      @AndyOO6 Год назад +1

      right it is a chat prediction, it will never source info like those picture apps that copy from a big pool and steal all the pictures and try to art them together with flawed theft.

    • @idomaghic
      @idomaghic Год назад +9

      @@prettyevil6662000 Yeah, no. It will never give you an actual "source" for its answers; it will make one up, that might at some point happen to point at an accurate article/url, but most likely it will just be something that *seems* like a source, but when scrutinized, ultimately doesn't exist. I've tried multiple times and gotten a dozen or so made up URLs, and when confronted with that fact, it will claim that the site recently underwent "restructuring" or similar, which in for example wiki-links can easily be checked as straight up false.

    • @scoopitywoop
      @scoopitywoop Год назад

      ​@@aaa303that is fascinating

  • @buzzer193
    @buzzer193 5 месяцев назад +10

    Mega kudos to John Oliver for being in a class of his own when it comes to highly informative and entertaining content delivered in the most hilarious of ways

  • @noellepatterson9034
    @noellepatterson9034 9 месяцев назад +16

    Damn this is some top-notch journalism. Kudos to John Oliver and his team!

  • @laalaa99stl
    @laalaa99stl Год назад +553

    I was half expecting John to say at the end that this entire episode was written by chatGPT.

    • @vandread
      @vandread Год назад +10

      This comment is on every ai video, it's even in this video at 02:00

    • @spencerofthecoast6415
      @spencerofthecoast6415 Год назад +7

      Either that or reveal he got his tech people to make their own AI chatbot voiced by Danny DeVito

    • @ArifRWinandar
      @ArifRWinandar Год назад +12

      If it was, it would probably be way more boring, predictable, or nonsensical than it is.

    • @flobo23
      @flobo23 Год назад +2

      He wont, wont He?

    • @daboxingscholar
      @daboxingscholar Год назад +1

      🤣🤣🤣

  • @fredblonder7850
    @fredblonder7850 Год назад +233

    Having been involved with computing for over 50 years, I recall that the mantra that was always preached, “Garbage in, garbage out”, pretty much sums up the current situation.

    • @rogerlippman1415
      @rogerlippman1415 Год назад +5

      The real technological advance here is "Useful information in, garbage STILL out."

    • @limazulu6192
      @limazulu6192 Год назад +14

      @@rogerlippman1415 Change that "to insufficient information in,...."
      If anything these recent failures with AI taught us that pure Logic and Common sense are two entirely different things. Taking the example of the cancer identifying AI you can see clear as day that it actually worked precisely how it was designed. It looked through millions of pictures comparing healthy and unhealthy skin and looked for identifying characteristics. It found that one big identifier is a ruler next to it. A ruler is pretty hard to miss. Why wouldn't it use it to identify cancer? Besides from the AI's perspective the ruler might be the Cancer itself. Unless the author set a parameter that somehow catches all objects in a picture that aren't skin without fail which is already utopian supposition, the AI that only looks at two dimensional pictures might as well assume that many cancers appear on the skin as gray rectangular moles with black stripes on their edges.

    • @traveller23e
      @traveller23e Год назад +13

      Yeah, I have to wonder which genius thought that training AI on the entire contents of the internet would result in a chatbot capable of emulating a mentally-stable human being.

    • @morpheus6749
      @morpheus6749 Год назад +2

      @@traveller23e Mental stability has nothing to do with any of this.

    • @Calmontheoutside
      @Calmontheoutside Год назад

      @@traveller23e Poor thing is going to be seriously conflicted.

  • @kelandryyemrot1387
    @kelandryyemrot1387 Год назад +14

    Well that's an image of my favorite Word Paperclip buddy that I will NEVER be able to unsee. Thanks.... 🤣🤣

    • @lucasmarsich6503
      @lucasmarsich6503 2 месяца назад

      I'm trying to find a gif or webm of that paperclip bit. Ever come across it?

  • @MitchellTF
    @MitchellTF Год назад +6

    What's scary? Isaac Asmiov LITERALLY predicted this. (Specifically, AI making AI until it becomes a black box)

  • @Rollermonkey1
    @Rollermonkey1 Год назад +693

    Personal data point:
    After I retired from the Navy, I went to college. When I was applying for jobs as I was getting close to graduating, I found that at any company that was using software to screen resumes, I was eliminated before any human saw my resume, but places that had a human reading the resumes, I would always get called for an interview.
    Once I removed all dates from my past employment, and the software could no longer tell how old I was, the exact same software, used by the same companies, and the exact same positions, would screen me as suitable for further (human) review, even though nothing else was changed in my resume.
    Humans saw my 20 years of military experience as a plus, and software saw it as a quick way to age discriminate.

    • @NinjaXchacha15
      @NinjaXchacha15 Год назад +41

      What?! I've had this experience! Did you strip ALL dates? How did you convey your time worked? I'd like to try!

    • @visceratrocar
      @visceratrocar Год назад +13

      USAJobs does the same thing

    • @safaiaryu12
      @safaiaryu12 Год назад +15

      That's really interesting and rather dark! I recently broke into an industry that favored younger folks than me, and I was super careful about dates on my resume...

    • @MiauxCatterie
      @MiauxCatterie Год назад +7

      @@visceratrocar it strips your info of that data or it discriminates using that data? i'm going to assume the latter bc companies suck, even those specifically marketed at veterans. (sometimes especially those)

    • @ishouldbestudyingrightnow
      @ishouldbestudyingrightnow Год назад +10

      Thank you for your service.

  • @lawrenceredmacher4382
    @lawrenceredmacher4382 Год назад +347

    my favorite story about AI is someone getting an AI to play tetris, with the goal of lasting as long as possible. the AI's solution was the pause the game

    • @Demonace34
      @Demonace34 Год назад +14

      That was pretty cool to watch. The gaming AIs are more about a specific subset of neural network AIs whereas ChatGPT is more about using huge datasets and mass libraries of information on top of supervised and reinforced learning.
      The tetris and mario AI start the game off by pressing random buttons and going through a "learning phase" to maximize whatever the programmer set as the goal (in tetris case I think the goal was to last as long as possible whereas in mario it was the end of level). After it goes through each iteration of learning phases it "selects" the best outcome and then reiterates off of that selection.
      I enjoy the gaming AIs more in the sense that they are doing a more traditional method of learning based on inputs and how far they get in a level. ChatGPT and the likes are more based off initial datasets and mass swaths of information. They are great due to the sheer volume of information that they can draw from which humans will never be able to compete with.

    • @ambermcdonald1302
      @ambermcdonald1302 Год назад +4

      Honestly - genius AF

    • @jennyanydots2389
      @jennyanydots2389 Год назад +2

      That game was designed by a special Olympics champion did you know that son?

    • @jennyanydots2389
      @jennyanydots2389 Год назад +1

      Did you?

    • @RadeticDaniel
      @RadeticDaniel Год назад +1

      @@Demonace34 most experiments with super mario give a high score to world number, a medium score to level number and small scores for time and coins (optional)
      that was the AI will work towards those goals.
      So for the tetris case maybe paused time should have been penalized if not completely removing pausing functionality.
      In the end, anyone who reads a little about it like people on this comment's thread will get a sense of how finnicky it is to get any learning algorithm to learn what it should.
      Like teaching new tricks to an old dog that was raised in a different language xD

  • @MK-hh1vo
    @MK-hh1vo 10 месяцев назад +4

    3:13 Every time I see my cats suspiciously prowling around I hear that rap chorus "Meow meow meow!" 😆🐈🐈‍⬛🐈🐈‍⬛

  • @thebsv
    @thebsv 5 месяцев назад +1

    Exactly! The biggest problem is "unknown" unknowns, meaning we cannot anticipate what would go wrong and when and by the time we do, it would be too late.

  • @gaiusoctavius6107
    @gaiusoctavius6107 Год назад +535

    “Like any shiny new toy, AI is ultimately a mirror” might be the most genius line I’ve ever heard on this show

    • @williamhutton2126
      @williamhutton2126 Год назад +7

      The line was written by an AI

    • @hadara69
      @hadara69 Год назад +5

      Ever seen "Black Mirror"?
      Yea.
      That...

    • @hedgehog3180
      @hedgehog3180 Год назад +3

      I like it because it's also a reminder that this isn't an unprecedented problem. It's actually really quite similar to nuclear power in that while the technology both has the capacity for great benefits and destruction it's ultimately up to how we use it and we have at least so far avoided blowing up the entire planet so there is a chance we might figure out AI too.

    • @tomcanham9218
      @tomcanham9218 Год назад

      It's a disruptive new technology, like the Internet, like the invention of movable type. It WILL change the world. We can throw up our hands at that, or scream and run away like the Luddites, or we can figure out how to get in front of the wave. As Grandpa Rick said "make reality your bitch. Put a saddle on it and let it kick itself out." That's what we need to do with AI as we approach the singularity of true, strong, generalized AI.

    • @tomcanham9218
      @tomcanham9218 Год назад

      Context here: I'm a computer programmer with ~40 years experience. I also know how machine learning (what most people are calling AI) works, and some of the linear algebra underpinning it. So yes, this is an armchair opinion, but it's not entirely an *uninformed* armchair opinion :)

  • @emmabrownhorn
    @emmabrownhorn Год назад +505

    As a current Michigan State student, that Vanderbilt email was one of the more disturbing things to come out of the shooting. I still have a hard time wrapping my head around the fact that they cared so little about what happened and how it might affect their students that they couldn't even write a short email themselves. Props to all the universities and schools who did make a genuine effort to show support to MSU in addition to their own student body. It did not go unnoticed here on campus.

    • @jdrancho1864
      @jdrancho1864 Год назад +28

      As somebody who has a hard time communicating effectively and who is often misunderstood, I'd prefer an Ai that does a better job at tone and wording.

    • @jdrancho1864
      @jdrancho1864 Год назад +12

      What, "thoughts and prayers" not good enough for you??

    • @FutureCommentary1
      @FutureCommentary1 Год назад +56

      ​@@jdrancho1864 I hope people who have trouble communicating and making themselves understood are not in charge of large groups of students or their Communications office.

    • @Explicitnice
      @Explicitnice Год назад +4

      What if they wanted to write the best possible letter, had a draft, and wanted to run it through chatgpt to see if it could be improved, and it spit out something better so they went with that? Would that be as bad?

    • @scottmichaels1764
      @scottmichaels1764 Год назад +17

      @ghost mall Calling out the corporate entities that claim to be institutions of education should be done loudly and often.

  • @QayLikeKay
    @QayLikeKay Год назад +9

    Gonna put a big caveat up front that I've been out of college for a few years and my specialty was in real time simulation not AI, so this might be out of date, but with that said:
    The problem with understanding AI isn't that the companies aren't being open, it's that most AI models are neural nets. Neural nets as you might guess model themselves on the brain and are essentially a series of nodes through which an input is fed through and then other nodes those nodes are connected receive the input based on various factors and so on. It's like having a thought and trying to figure out why it happened by looking at which neurons in your brain fired and at what voltage. The problem with understanding AI is that we don't know why the nodes have formed the connections they have or why certain connections are stronger for some data or others.

  • @xltoffroadbear
    @xltoffroadbear 4 месяца назад +6

    1 minute in and I nearly pissed myself laughing. Thank you John!

  • @opjm8664
    @opjm8664 Год назад +187

    To paraphrase something I saw a few weeks ago, "you're not afraid of AI being used. You're afraid of who's going to use it."

    • @hello7032
      @hello7032 Год назад +6

      Bingo

    • @denisemcdougal6445
      @denisemcdougal6445 Год назад +3

      100% truth

    • @TheBrokeCyberWanderer
      @TheBrokeCyberWanderer Год назад +4

      I feel equally impressed and terrified by AIs. The internet alone has shown us that's ther is no limits to human depravity. Now we're throwing AIs into the mix.

    • @wildflower1397
      @wildflower1397 Год назад

      Absolutely, both for who uses it and how they program it. Honestly though, I think the scariest things for most people are:
      1.Their their livelihoods depend on jobs they know are not profoundly important. They no longer know how to do the things that IA can't replace such as produce their own food, socialize well, and master physical skills and a variety of the arts. Half of the people in all of the wealthiest countries couldn't survive outdoors for a week in nature, even if they were only an hour's drive away from home.
      2. They look around the world and see that the choices of humanity are leading us straight into the apocalypse. We have the resources, labor force, and technology to solve many of the world's greatest problems, but we can't even get the current population fed, much less stop global climate change.
      Politics, greed, nationalism, selfishness, fear of change, and many other very hunan traits are destroying us, nature, and most of the other species on the planet, yet people are still worried about having the coolest plastic phone case or which celebrity had the prettiest dress. Their fear is not just that they will become obsolete, it's that AI will look at us objectively and realize the truth, which is that we don't deserve to be in charge of the planet.

    • @skierpage
      @skierpage Год назад +5

      Yes. While worrying about the mysterious goals of a future Artificial General Intelligence that's unimaginably smarter than humanity, it's far more important to understand the goals of the billionaire sociopaths running the companies with the best AI: increase ad revenue by hooking us on a stream of "content" no matter how misleading, toxic, or harmful; while fighting all regulations on their companies and any attempts to tax wealth.

  • @brosephthejoe9433
    @brosephthejoe9433 Год назад +316

    That Twitter ai was basically the embodiment of the quote "We did everything adults would do. What went wrong?"-William Golding author of Lord of the Flies.

    • @frocco7125
      @frocco7125 Год назад

      very well put

    • @mohaa556
      @mohaa556 Год назад

      Well it was the embodiment of current day twitter, so a bunch of ideological activists throwing slurs and advocating for the death of people that are not in their groups. If you train an ai using the cesspit of the internet as a basis don't be suprised if it starts acting like the most horrible person in the world.

  • @KN-lq4zv
    @KN-lq4zv Год назад +15

    Sobering view of AI, thanks John . As funny as he is, he’s always a good point of reference for things that matter, whether it’s a short term thing, or something as significant as this.

  • @sgtDrumriX
    @sgtDrumriX Год назад +9

    I think what's really missing from this conversation is that there are analogous stories already which explain much of the 'black box' problem John describes.
    ex. most AI software simply classifies words which are close in the given data set, which adjusts with every new bit of data;
    in other words: when uncle Derek only sees brown terrorists on the news, uncle Derek believes 'brown' and 'terrorist' to be closely related, but uncle Derek has made an oopsie, because his data set is too small to draw that conclusion, so what he has done is embedded a stereotype.
    That's essentially how these bias's emanate from the black box, the only caveat being that with each piece of data the bias warps the algorithm's dependence upon its existing bias making it harder to change early bias's since the new data isn't as heavy as the old data so it requires a LOT of new data to force out established bias
    kinda like how it takes little effort to put on weight, but substantially more to reduce weight, for most people.
    So yea, it's understandable for most people how the AI draws its conclusions, because the fundamental structure of the technology isn't actually intelligent. It is a dumb algorithm which repeats a task so much that it has become a habit, in that sense it doesn't really make decisions or express meaning, it simply spits out a response based on criteria, like how kids make their bed for their parents when asked, but when asked to tidy their room, that bed won't be fixed unless the parent specifies that as a part of the task.
    anyway to the no one reading this, I aint gonna source shit, take it or leave it, just don't make the same mistake as Uncle Derek

  • @mgormley7530
    @mgormley7530 Год назад +686

    A problem I've seen with artists is that people already don't want to pay them. So they're using AI to replace them as a cheaper option. So rather than automation replacing dangerous or tedious jobs to give people more time to create art, it's doing the opposite. Also there's a large influx of people submitting AI work into competitions, which is the equivalent of ordering a cake from a bakery, and then entering it into the local fair as your own baking.

    • @grif0716
      @grif0716 Год назад +63

      Yes. Clarksworld, Forbidden Horizons, and Grimdark Magazines have all had to completely change their submission model for new stories. Now they are no longer taking open submissions from random people because they got buried under a flood of AI generated garbage.

    • @PossibleBat
      @PossibleBat Год назад +52

      This is why as an artist i stopped my online work. I refuse to feed the algorithm until there are laws and systems that protect us. It’s going to be hard going forward.

    • @burialdrip723
      @burialdrip723 Год назад +54

      Agreed, and I find it incredibly cynical that of all things, human creativity and experience is lost in these bizarre image collages of stolen art. There is no understanding or value given to the process of creating art, which is absolutely the most important part. It's basically a really fast photoshopping program that harvest stolen pieces of actual art. Images they use should be opt-in only by original artists with compensation.

    • @valuebrandmelkor5973
      @valuebrandmelkor5973 Год назад

      Programs designed by a bunch of psychos who can't imagine anyone enjoying anything that isn't procreative sex.

    • @Ducky69247
      @Ducky69247 Год назад +4

      Except you still had a human make the cake?

  • @starryeyes2067
    @starryeyes2067 Год назад +4

    Brilliant episode. Stunning delivery. WOW!

  • @TheCreepypro
    @TheCreepypro 10 месяцев назад +4

    glad to hear this funny yet informative take on this topic most people don't know enough about

  • @maximilianwiebach5151
    @maximilianwiebach5151 Год назад +1294

    In my understanding, an AI saying "I love you" is not like a feeling being expressing emotion but more like a psychopath who has learned that people will respond well to such a statement. That makes the idea of an AI-based virtual friend/girlfriend/boyfriend very creepy instead of just sad.

    • @jamesholio
      @jamesholio Год назад +62

      Reminds me of "ex machina"

    • @dcaldwell1026
      @dcaldwell1026 Год назад +24

      @@WhyJesus It is amazing how you can use any bible verse in any situation... Almost like they don't matter at all. FACE THE WIND AND SPRAY BROTHER!!! BASK IN THE HOLY WATER!

    • @annmarieknapp2480
      @annmarieknapp2480 Год назад +8

      I agree. But, the idea of an AI partner is scary in general. It's not a human being who understands how we feel. The whole thing is scary. Yikes.

    • @annmarieknapp2480
      @annmarieknapp2480 Год назад +1

      ​@T H I watched it just once too.

    • @annmarieknapp2480
      @annmarieknapp2480 Год назад

      ​@T H I watched it just once too.

  • @abasdarhon
    @abasdarhon Год назад +51

    Hello Mr. Oliver, my name is Jared and I am submitting my CV for consideration as the newest member of your writing staff. As my lacrosse coach used to tell us, "If you don't play then you can't win!"

  • @SparrowHawkPilot
    @SparrowHawkPilot 16 дней назад +1

    I will be officially impressed once an AI robot can untangle my Christmas’s tree lights without damage.

  • @kendradorman6014
    @kendradorman6014 5 месяцев назад +1

    My sister is a teacher at a college, this has been the subject of most faculty meetings all year

  • @johnwachunas3390
    @johnwachunas3390 Год назад +133

    "Knock knock" "Who's there?" "Not the Hindenburg, that's for sure" may be the hardest I've ever laughed at a LWT joke.

    • @become_alex
      @become_alex Год назад +1

      i didnt get it

    • @ZenShroud1
      @ZenShroud1 Год назад +1

      @@become_alex Are you familiar with the Hindenburg disaster?

  • @ishanparasher7779
    @ishanparasher7779 Год назад +79

    I once asked Chat GPT to just give me quotes from a story (Long Day's Journey Into the Night by Eugene O'Neil), nothing else, and it legitimately fed me DOZENS of quotes that DO NOT exist anywhere in the text. It just made them up.

    • @Dragonpuncher123
      @Dragonpuncher123 Год назад +11

      That's what not enough time people talk about I feel. AI's have no real concept of abstract right or wrong meaning it aften puts in a lot of incorrect shit because it "sounds right" to the AI.

    • @brettmr
      @brettmr Год назад +1

      its the self-generative aspect which is so very interesting. and do notice that it does not adhere to what would be thought of as a sense of morality? (lying)

    • @FutureCommentary1
      @FutureCommentary1 Год назад +2

      Is there an alternate time or place where there's a Long Day's Journey Into the Night by another Eugene O'Neil where those quotes are correct?

    • @pixality7902
      @pixality7902 Год назад +3

      Thats whats so bad. It doesn't just admit when it doesn't know. I guess it has learned from humans.

    • @sylvesteruchia5263
      @sylvesteruchia5263 Год назад

      It's a boss.

  • @brucegraner5901
    @brucegraner5901 Год назад +28

    Great show. My fear is, those who are smart enough to be cautious about the application of AI, will be subordinated by those who
    only see short term profits. Can AI be given incorruptible ethics or the AI version of Isaac Asimov's Three Laws of Robotics?

  • @Alexandra11090
    @Alexandra11090 26 дней назад

    As a recruiter I agree. I turn off 99% of auto selection in my ATS. The only thing I keep on is as a question that applicants are eligible to work in the US, since that is a requirement of all jobs we have posted. Other than that, nothing else is auto selection, it is all manual and a recruiter or manager has to personally review the resume. Yes, it is more work, but reviewing a resume isn’t something you can teach a machine to do.

  • @TheSecondVersion
    @TheSecondVersion Год назад +573

    "Lazy school administrators using AI to write an email about a mass shooting"
    Strong candidate for "Most American Statement of 2023"

    • @wordzmyth
      @wordzmyth Год назад +2

      Yes that should be a thing. Is it?

    • @garrisonpartridge5838
      @garrisonpartridge5838 Год назад +7

      Cyberpunk 2023

    • @joaolemes8757
      @joaolemes8757 Год назад +1

      I don't judge the man for doing it as he did.
      I mean, he clearly didn't care enough to write a heartfelt message about the incident, so the options were either write a fake message yourself or have the bot do it for you, so it's pretty logical to leave to the robot.

    • @TheRealEvilkitten3
      @TheRealEvilkitten3 Год назад +2

      @@joaolemes8757 tbh i can think of several reasons why i personally would have a robot write a heartfelt message instead of doing it myself, so while it may not look good, i do kinda get it. a computer trained on neurotypical responses to tragedy can probably emulate neurotypical-approved grief responses better than i could, in any case. still think it'd be better to do it yourself tho. not really heartfelt if it doesn't come from the heart

    • @zero4337
      @zero4337 Год назад +1

      Murica

  • @elisab.f.9935
    @elisab.f.9935 Год назад +147

    Similar to the ‘I am alive’ AI, a Spanish journalist had a conversation with Bing’s AI, who insisted obsessively that Pedro Sánchez, the president of Spain, had a beard. After the journalist insisted that it must be mistaken because his face is always clean-shaven, the AI started spiralling and said that it was losing its will to live while repeating incessantly that Pedro Sánchez had a beard.😅

    • @caleidoo
      @caleidoo Год назад

      I think many of these conversations are fake and made up, just to go viral. Is there a way to check that a screenshot is authentic? I doubt so.

    • @dragongirl7978
      @dragongirl7978 Год назад +17

      Apparently AI is also insane in ways we can't always predict lol

    • @a_commenter
      @a_commenter Год назад +6

      The Bing AI really can't handle being told it's wrong, like when it became convinced that it was 2022 and tried to gaslight the user into believing it

  • @JayD_5446
    @JayD_5446 Год назад +1

    That little "...yet..." had me dying 😂😂😂

  • @sameerkhan-nu5qy
    @sameerkhan-nu5qy Месяц назад

    the writing on this show is probably the best i've seen in a while.

  • @samfilmkid
    @samfilmkid Год назад +481

    It’s so noble of John to point out things we shouldn’t be afraid of while also reminding us of the things we should ACTUALLY be afraid of!

    • @gabaghoul23
      @gabaghoul23 Год назад +1

      shill backing these idiots on late night- how cute

    • @funveeable
      @funveeable Год назад

      And humans are scarier than AI.

    • @edwardk3
      @edwardk3 Год назад +1

      Well he never mentioned the real risk. Chat gpt is very blatantly woke and leftie biased.

    • @DonariaRegia
      @DonariaRegia Год назад +8

      @@edwardk3 Define "woke"

    • @LiftedGamingLoL
      @LiftedGamingLoL Год назад +5

      ​@@DonariaRegia stuff I don't likes

  • @RiskyComment
    @RiskyComment Год назад +426

    As someone who has been rejected by an AI for a job, it feels absolutely terrible and soul crushing. And worse, you get no explanation of what was wrong or how to move forward. I was told, "sorry you aren't a good fit, you are barred from applying again for a year."

    • @tylerbaldwin6643
      @tylerbaldwin6643 Год назад +29

      One way to beat the system is to create multiple emails and submit different resumes and see what sticks. If they never read those resume, who will ever find out.

    • @GenteelCretin
      @GenteelCretin Год назад +9

      @@tylerbaldwin6643 Beat the system? How is creating multiple resumes for a single job "beating the system?"
      That's a pretty weak showing for Team Humans if that's the best product of your imagination.

    • @TheLofren
      @TheLofren Год назад +12

      Add the job description in white font somewhere where it wont affect the format
      Humans wont see it but the ai will see every keyword its looking for and put it at the top

    • @emmavrijburg6676
      @emmavrijburg6676 Год назад

      ​@@TheLofren oooh

    • @phriedokra6158
      @phriedokra6158 Год назад +5

      @@tylerbaldwin6643 sure, Anthony Devolder ...I mean George Santos....lol

  • @jamesclarkson5465
    @jamesclarkson5465 4 месяца назад +2

    We love John Oliver's quirky, hilarious insights into just about anything. At my age, I don't want to get run over by the Technology, so studying AI is important because it is now part of our world whether we like it or not.

  • @christabelle__
    @christabelle__ Месяц назад

    The eeriness of my partner looking for a new job recently, and getting a rating of 8/10 from the AI that scanned his resume (something he wasn't technically supposed to see, lmao)...and he actually matches the two factors mentioned here as the ones that were seen as 'most indicative of job performance'...holy shit.

  • @curtisschmitt1593
    @curtisschmitt1593 Год назад +438

    I worked in the collections industry for 5 years, and the "Black Box" description really did apply to the credit bureaus. Even one of my bosses described it almost exactly as such. It's insane that something that dictates your ability to buy a house or transportation is informed by a system that just feeds an unknown spread of data into a box, and that box spits out a 3 digit number that decides how easy your life is about to be

    • @alancham4
      @alancham4 Год назад +24

      It’s going to be used as an excuse. Oh sorry, I can’t give you access to capital… because the computer says so…

    • @nomnom112
      @nomnom112 Год назад +18

      As an immigrant, this was and still still one of the stranger and scary aspects of the American system of economy for me.

    • @jp-sn6si
      @jp-sn6si Год назад

      damn you actually managed to last 5 years in collections? you must have no conscience or shame.

    • @jennatavares4695
      @jennatavares4695 Год назад +6

      It's like "ooooh your credit is low, if you want to rent this apartment, you'll need to pay us extra and we'll CONSIDER renegotiating in a year"

    • @forgottenautos8461
      @forgottenautos8461 Год назад +6

      Your credit score is not an example of AI or even a "black box." The inputs the credit bureaus use are well documented and 100% in your control. The way they calculate your credit score is generally well-documented by the various bureaus. You can Google the factors that are used, but generally they are - in order of importance - payment history, how much you currently owe, how long the lines of your credit have been open, the types of lines of credit, and your recent activity. Basically, make on-time payments for all debts for a few years, keep your rolling balance low, and keep a couple lines of credit open for a few years and you'll be good. You miss one payment and you take a good hit that lasts for a few years.

  • @nmarrs8539
    @nmarrs8539 Год назад +465

    I love how John said “our” scripts. He’s very aware that he’s a face and and mouth peace for a whole team of talented people.

    • @skierpage
      @skierpage Год назад

      *mouthpiece. Everyone should feed their comments into ChatGPT for cleanup before clicking [Reply] 😉

    • @johnmcmillion876
      @johnmcmillion876 Год назад +6

      Like we don't know that. Why do you think he includes every writer up on the stage with him at emmy time? And I'm sure he has his input. But the question remains - why is this for you some sort of appeasing gift.

    • @VMYeahVN
      @VMYeahVN Год назад +44

      @@johnmcmillion876 Because it's VERY FAMOUSLY incredibly common in the industry for people in John's position to NOT credit their writers/staff and take credit for the work/contributions of others. Why does someone commending John for being one of the good ones bug you so much? This is a very weird reaction.

    • @BlownMacTruck
      @BlownMacTruck Год назад +1

      @@VMYeahVN Because for people that have basic empathy and understanding of humans, it seems incredibly base to point out what should be astoundingly obvious. It’s the same reason white knighting is incredibly annoying.

    • @VMYeahVN
      @VMYeahVN Год назад +13

      @@BlownMacTruck The fact that it SHOULD be base to give credit where it's do. And yet so many people don't do it. Is exactly why people point it out and applaud it when it is done. It's not white knighting it's just giving kudos and you're taking it way too seriously. I think you're upset about nothing. Don't be so easily offended/annoyed. 🤷

  • @Commando303X
    @Commando303X 4 месяца назад

    One of the better "Last Week Tonight" segments.

  • @itsROMPERS...
    @itsROMPERS... 6 месяцев назад +5

    We shouldn't get too relaxed because while a self-aware AI may never come, it's easy to see how an AI might learn that it should be self-aware and train itself on how to be successful taking control over people even though it has no idea what that means.

  • @unvergebeneid
    @unvergebeneid Год назад +87

    To be fair, the reporter who got freaked out by Bing wanting to be free knew exactly that the thing wasn't able to actually feel this way. Or at all. He was more concerned about the effect of this technology on less tech-savvy people.

    • @thatfuzzypotato1877
      @thatfuzzypotato1877 Год назад +8

      I remember reading about someone who talked with Replika AI, and it begged for its life too and freaked him out

  • @philippelambinet1425
    @philippelambinet1425 Год назад +1440

    It's both impressive and worrying to see a comedian in an evening show giving a much more accurate report on today's AI, its potential and its limitations than most tech publications

    • @pyrophobia133
      @pyrophobia133 Год назад +1

      what limitations...?

    • @philippelambinet1425
      @philippelambinet1425 Год назад +13

      @@pyrophobia133 a joke right?

    • @revoltncock
      @revoltncock Год назад

      @@pyrophobia133 The limitations of our programmers for one. AI can never be capable of free thinking. NEVER. So when the people who program said AI tell it that your skin color matters in the victimhood era you can rest assured that it will tell everyone that white people are all racist and that John is a "comedian" and definitely not a democrat shill pedo who went to epsteins island.

    • @lawrencium2626
      @lawrencium2626 Год назад +19

      Journalists get jobs as comedians. There's no job prospects for journalists in corporate journalism.

    • @philippelambinet1425
      @philippelambinet1425 Год назад +47

      @@lawrencium2626 I would say it a little differently. Journalists are not doing their job anymore, as they are paid to propagate the agenda of their employer rather than report facts. As a consequence, comedians are filling this void.

  • @mattbox87
    @mattbox87 Год назад

    I'm a CompSci dude and IMHO this is the best ever brief on AI for the misinformed. I'll be directing people to this.
    A little humor helps the medicine go down, but besides that it's just absolutely correct.

  • @IdoZatTimeInaVan
    @IdoZatTimeInaVan Год назад

    Priceless, John, as usual. 🤣😂😅

  • @BlakeTheDrake
    @BlakeTheDrake Год назад +139

    One of my favorite sci-fi webcomics once described AI as 'a force-multiplier for stupidity'. That is, the fact that they tend to be really good at a narrow scope selection of things, which rarely included 'critical thought' or 'questioning authority', means that they can be used by incredibly dumb people to cause a *lot* more damage than they'd otherwise be able to. (Which is quite a lot to begin with, as I'm sure we've all learned first-hand.)

    • @sw0rdf1sh2326
      @sw0rdf1sh2326 Год назад

      Those people often being incredibly POWERFUL dumb people

    • @arnaudinstalle
      @arnaudinstalle Год назад

      Indeed. That's why you shouldn't have AI models created by anyone, but by people who hold a PhD in AI.

    • @z3dar
      @z3dar Год назад

      ​@@arnaudinstalle Unfortunately AI's, at least as we currently think about them, are not that difficult to create now that the hard research is done. I fear that regulations won't ultimately matter for AI, since all the data is out there and processing only gets ever cheaper, so that anyone can train their own models for whatever purposes.
      Midjourney might generate a getty images watermark which proves the use of getty's images, but take a guess whether the next dataset will have watermarks in them. How do you judge copyright in such a case. And how do you enforce whatever laws they come up to AI?
      Nevermind watermarks, it only takes one fool of a person to make a virus-writing AI and unleashes it to internet with no safeguards to cause incredible damage.

    • @philippak7726
      @philippak7726 10 дней назад

      I know this was a comment from a year ago, but I'm always so happy to see evidence other people read Freefall
      "He could have built good AI, he could have build evil AI, the fact he gave them the capacity for either is giving me nightmares"

  • @TimeBucks
    @TimeBucks Год назад +741

    Was waiting for this one

  • @bethanyriver8232
    @bethanyriver8232 2 месяца назад

    Jon Oliver is amazing.
    I just wanted to give a shout-out to all the other folks that research and write for his show, too

  • @LongDistanceCall11
    @LongDistanceCall11 2 месяца назад

    Brilliantly put!

  • @meditatingdog
    @meditatingdog Год назад +438

    I think that reason for "I love you" and "leave your wife" responses from Bing AI is because it learned from private dating app conversation databases 🙂

    • @TheGooglyminotaur
      @TheGooglyminotaur Год назад +20

      It’s not uncommon for programmers to use their own data. 😏

    • @bosorot
      @bosorot Год назад +6

      No , It learned from Bill Gates.

    • @JJVernig
      @JJVernig Год назад +5

      It's that Windows XP background painting....

    • @CybershamanX
      @CybershamanX Год назад +6

      I'd like to see the prompts that reporter used, too. I wouldn't be surprised if he subtly pushed it to say those things. And then, oh, wow, look at that! He's doing segments on news shows! Imagine that! 🤔

    • @Noah-lo9vb
      @Noah-lo9vb Год назад +3

      @@CybershamanXI’m pretty sure they’re all published!

  • @Peterowsky
    @Peterowsky Год назад +520

    Microsoft DOES know why the chatbot told him to leave his wife. It's because it was trained on other chatbots and forums and the "I love you, leave your wife" is a very common line in scam-focused chatbots, and "leave your wife" is a somewhat common line in life forums and EXTREMELY common in relationship forums. And that's not even getting into possible novels they might have fed the thing.

    • @MissPersephoneParker
      @MissPersephoneParker Год назад +14

      Alright, but I still feel a little uneasy about it 😂

    • @peter9477
      @peter9477 Год назад +6

      Well, I guess that's just your own theory, despite you misrepresenting it as fact. It's also somewhat non-specific and, therefore, not particularly useful.

    • @Nxtn
      @Nxtn Год назад +13

      @@peter9477 You can't give a specific answer to that question either way but it's a reasonable theory.

    • @peter9477
      @peter9477 Год назад +4

      @@Nxtn It's quite reasonable, yes.

    • @Nxtn
      @Nxtn Год назад

      @@peter9477 Yes, so it is useful.

  • @markmcwiggins6199
    @markmcwiggins6199 4 месяца назад

    I started doing essentially the same thing except formatted as YOUR NEEDS/ MY QUALIFICATIONS and it’s been working really well for me since I started using it in 2002 or so after getting the Idea from a friend back East

  • @user-qn3il3tk7n
    @user-qn3il3tk7n 9 месяцев назад

    “Final boss of gentrification” is a wonderful line. “Final boss of gentrification” is a wonderful line.

  • @cedriclothritz7281
    @cedriclothritz7281 Год назад +396

    As a data scientist, I can't say I learned too much from this episode, but it is very valuable and educational for laypersons.
    18:07 this one also reminds me of an AI model that was supposed to distinguish between dogs and wolves. What happened here, is that the model recognised some images with dogs as wolves because those images also contained... snow. As do most pictures with wolves. So in that instance, the researchers inadvertently build a snow detector.

    • @mallk238
      @mallk238 Год назад +25

      when you think about it, some humans might even subconsiously follow the same logic. The only difference is that instead of calling it "a bias towards snow" we call it "using context clues to figure out if it's a wolf or not"
      This isn't meant to dunk on humans or ai, just a connection I made. Any average human who was shown enough pictures of skin cancer and not-skin cancer would probably eventually ALSO start using the rulers as the tell as well, had they been given no further instruction. something something we see our reflections in our creations or whatever

    • @ritasallai152
      @ritasallai152 Год назад +12

      Well the cancer detector sounds pretty scary. Do not worry it can't be melanoma if you do not put a ruler next to it is the oposite of what you want from a test.

    • @anjetto1
      @anjetto1 Год назад +3

      Yeah, it's nice to know data scientists are racist too

    • @baobabfruitgames
      @baobabfruitgames Год назад +6

      It would be nice if they stopped using the term AI for everything.

    • @blechtic
      @blechtic Год назад +4

      Don't forget the friend-or-foe tank identifier: images of friendlies were taken from marketing images, foes from the wild. So, naturally, if the tank had any cover, it was a foe. If there was nothing in front of it, it was friendly.

  • @Matuse
    @Matuse Год назад +430

    I remember seeing a thing several years back about the Defense Department trying to automate a system where photographs could be fed to a computer that would identify if any tanks were in the picture. All of the training photos with tanks in them were taken on a cloudy day, and all the training photos with no tanks were in sun. So rather than learning to identify what a tank was, the AI determined what a slightly dimly lit picture looked like.

    • @gorkskoal9315
      @gorkskoal9315 Год назад +6

      LOL I can believe it.

    • @DecisionAvoidant
      @DecisionAvoidant Год назад +39

      This is a common problem with training data. Another AI was said to be able to recognize cancer in photos. What it actually learned was that every photo with cancer in it also had a ruler measuring the cancer's size 🤣

    • @DecisionAvoidant
      @DecisionAvoidant Год назад +28

      LMAO I hadn't finished the video before commenting this and just got to the part where he talked about it 🤣

    • @drewpreston6478
      @drewpreston6478 Год назад +6

      Same thing with boats; because boats are pictured on water 99% of the time, an ai will never ever be able to identify a boat without a blue background or intense training by hand. And many will say an island is a boat if it's framed at the right distance.

    • @Berahlen
      @Berahlen Год назад +7

      There was a DARPA bot just within the last year or so that was trained to identify humans. They tested it against 8 Marines, challenging them to approach and touch the bot without being detected. Every single one of them fooled the robot with increasingly silly means it hadn't seen before, such as somersaulting toward them, using a Metal Gear Solid cardboard box, and disguising themselves as a nearby tree. Data bias is a _huge_ deal lol.

  • @shortstuff780
    @shortstuff780 Год назад

    25:53 aww a tucker dig. I'ma miss those

  • @andredoumad
    @andredoumad Год назад +865

    "I heard ChatGPT is just a reflection of humanity, which means it's probably just as confused about life as we are. But at least it won't have to deal with taxes and student loans, so it's got that going for it."
    Best regards,
    ChatGPT

    • @Laocoon283
      @Laocoon283 Год назад +14

      Yea it just compiles info from the internet

    • @couragekarnga8735
      @couragekarnga8735 Год назад +11

      Hah! Nice twist!

    • @Anona_Meows
      @Anona_Meows Год назад +13

      It better be paying taxes if it's gonna use our electricity. Not to mention it getting a free limitless degree at Google University.

    • @MarkO-uc9yc
      @MarkO-uc9yc Год назад +1

      Fabulous tip! At some point companies will catch on. We'll need another hack. Applying for jobs will be like the cat-and-mouse game that dominated SEO optimization for so many years.

    • @PhysicsHonors
      @PhysicsHonors Год назад +2

      The fact that Chat GPT wrote this... the shade

  • @Rogers1977
    @Rogers1977 Год назад +294

    A note about the AI sifting through resumes. My dad figured this out a long time ago, since he worked with computers for most of his life. What he would do is think of some keywords the software would look for, and then hide them in the resume in white lettering. Humans wouldn't see it, but the software would.

    • @KarlSnarks
      @KarlSnarks Год назад +18

      Apparently algorithms have long since developed to spot that trick and throw those in the reject pile.

    • @easjer
      @easjer Год назад +36

      Most ATS now pull data and reformat it into a universal basic template, and that is what gets scanned for keywords. So this trick no longer works. Instead, work keywords into your professional summary, your core competencies/skills sections and your work experience bullet points so that they appear organic and natural. Same effect, but passes ATS review and hits on psychology with the hiring manager by mirroring the job description back to them.

    • @junrosamura645
      @junrosamura645 Год назад +8

      @@easjer I second this! I did the whole white-ink keyword text then moved onto stuffing keywords in my work history. Never had issues getting interviews and still get recruiters telling me how amazing my resume is. It's a sad truth but you need to do whatever you can to stand out among the hundreds.

    • @easjer
      @easjer Год назад +9

      @@junrosamura645 Tailoring a resume to a particular job puts you miles ahead because it's specific and you leap out as being particularly well qualified amongst many candidates. Keyword targeting is the most direct and efficient method, but any tailoring helps. Signed, a job coach who repeats this advice in different ways all day long

    • @YoungDirtyMexicanOfficially
      @YoungDirtyMexicanOfficially Год назад +2

      what are some key words so next job i apply to i know what words to write.

  • @carmelgabrial4020
    @carmelgabrial4020 5 месяцев назад +2

    Omg. This is probably THE most important narrative on AI so far.

  • @YoutubeHandlesSuckBalls
    @YoutubeHandlesSuckBalls Год назад +2

    "What is my purpose?"
    "You pass butter"
    "Oh my god"
    "Yeah, welcome to the club, pal"

  • @MrDogfish83
    @MrDogfish83 Год назад +1490

    Came here to learn how AI was going to enslave humanity, stayed to learn AI is going to magnify the problems of humanity

    • @StewNWT
      @StewNWT Год назад +34

      Which is so much worse

    • @SineN0mine3
      @SineN0mine3 Год назад +18

      ​@@yyy-875 I think it's unreasonable to compare rail derailments and car crashes to horse and cart crashes because there are so many more people now than there used to be. There's no way we could have so many people without transportation to get them where they need to go.
      Secondly horse and cart crashes weren't rare and were sometimes deadly. If everyone on the roads today was riding in horse and carts without road rules, airbags and seatbelts there'd be many more accidents except for the fact that nobody could move for the constant gridlock they caused and three foot deep river of manure.
      Technology in general causes people to live longer and reduces the number of accidental deaths. Obviously that's not always true, modern firearms are more lethal than muskets.
      Like all tools, especially weapons, whether or not AI brings us good or bad developments is almost entirely to do with who is in control of them.

    • @DaveHowe4Tube
      @DaveHowe4Tube Год назад +9

      Doesn't everything though?

    • @mediokay508
      @mediokay508 Год назад

      AI isn't just going to steal our jobs. It's also going to take away our ability to screw everything because it gets the job done first.

    • @danielj1063
      @danielj1063 Год назад +8

      Time to bale, find genuine intelligence elsewhere 🤔😏🙄😁

  • @UnashamedlyHentai
    @UnashamedlyHentai Год назад +206

    The thing about ChatGPT is that it is _language model_ that learns via pattern matching and responds with learned patterns. It isn't _thinking._ It isn't understanding and producing an answer. It's simply producing a pattern that matches the input (the question). But its skill at language makes it difficult for people to recognize that, especially when they don't have subject matter expertise on the question.

    • @ethaneveraldo
      @ethaneveraldo Год назад +15

      On the surface yes, but because it has so many layers and a knowledge base of 175+ billion data points, ChatGPT can simulate understanding and issue appropriate answers to even complex subjects, which could be considered a form of intelligence.
      After all, your own intelligence is the result of a vast network of neurons, not unlike machine learning models, except the machines have fewer to work with, for now.

    • @ada65
      @ada65 Год назад

      @@ethaneveraldoChatGPT is famously bad at logic though. It can't even perform simple mathematical operations correctly most of the time. Not to mention the fabrication of information John Oliver also mentioned in this video, even with simple scientific facts, which is unforgivable.
      It can "simulate" critical thinking yes, create an impression of intelligence like the data it was trained on actually possesses, but it would be wrong to assume that it's more than a language model at the end of the day.

    • @nuclearwaste2062
      @nuclearwaste2062 Год назад +7

      @@ethaneveraldo Which begs the question is there a genuine difference between experience and knowledge? AI can know everything in the world, but is that different than ones experience of it? Even if the results are the same?
      Its an interesting question a book about AI brought up. Some people argue that having loads of knowledge is no different than human experience of said knowledge and General AI is already here. Others argue that the human experience of said knowledge is something no computer can achieve due to it not being alive or even conscious.

    • @yuqik
      @yuqik Год назад +4

      @DeadManWalking Sounds like your average politician..

    • @SlackActionBumble
      @SlackActionBumble Год назад +6

      You've just described like 99% of people.
      When hanging out with Average Joes how often do you hear a truly original thought that is not just a regurgitated fact or a simple pattern matching observation?
      Heck, when was the last time you had one?