This is specifically the approach that open AI decided to take, but actually, before open AI started building large language models and generative air systems at these colossal skills, the trend within the AI research community was going the opposite direction towards tiny AI systems, and there was all this really interesting research looking into how small your data sets could be to create powerful AI models, and how little computational resources you needed to create powerful AI models. So there were interesting papers that I wrote about, where you could have a couple hundred images to create highly performant AI systems, or, uh, you could have AI systems trained on your mobile device. And it's, like, a not even a one computer chip. on running on your mobile device, and opening eye took an approach that is now using hundreds of thousands of computer chips to train a single system, and those hundreds of thousands of computer ships now are consuming. You know, city, city loads of energy, And so, if we divorced the concept of AI progress with a scaling paradigm, you would realise that you can have housing, and you can have AI innovation. But once again, there's not a lot of independent experts that are actually saying these things, most AI experts today are employed by these companies, and this is basically the equivalent of if most climate scientists were being bankrolled by oil and gas companies, like they would tell you things that are not, in any sense of the word, scientifically grounded, but just good for the company. Mm, I entered a great guy, um, twice, actually now, guy with Angus Hansen, who's really just on it with regards to the explicit nature of the increasingly exposed nature of, um, of the United States economic relations with the UK. Just fascinating, fascinating, a book and man, and I just don't think it's cut through to our politicians here how bad it's getting, and you're saying about AI consumers or creators. Mm hmm. I mean, ultimately, you're talking about meta, you're talking about alphabetism, XAIs, and an open AI. We are consumers. We are dependent as a colonial exploitsive relationship, with regards to big tech, has been for a really long time. Our smartest people, which the taxpayer trains here, go to the US, I think, one of the top people at Slack is a UK National, Demis Asabis, you know, a deep mine now working under the, you know, the umbrella of alphabet, and, yeah, it just doesn't make, it just doesn't make sense to me, with regards to that formulation. They simply don't get it. You know, every, I came here using my MasterCard. Millions of Brits use Apple Paying, Google Pay and MasterCard and Visa, and every time we do it, I'll put one more 20% crosses the Atlantic. And it just goes over the heads of our class, which is very unnerving. In regards to the efficiency of these small assistants, where does deep sea fit in all this? Because, of course, the scaling laws at the heart of open AI, which is you get to HGI by more compute, more parameters, more data. is kind of untethered a bit by the arrival of Deep Sea. Yes, what do you think is such an interesting and complicated case? Because... they basically... it was... It's a Chinese AI model that was created by this company, High Flyer, and they were able to create a model that essentially matched and even exceeded some performance metrics of American models being developed by opening eye and anthropic with orders of magnitude, less... I'm going to post this on Facebook, making it my writing, and, uh, draw out the political aspects, uh, fake sediment, uh, how you know it's just written for an agenda, and the filters are going overtime. Okay, thank you. Just secured my caravan. Making sure nothing's leaking in. We've got a big, uh, thick sort of tarp. I'm almost plastic over it. Lick the oil off the tin, and... I'm in a really good position to keep this place dry. Mattress a little bit wet, no big deal. Turn it over. And these blog posts, they're very much in tradition with what we're working on. Funny how open our eye decides to leave in the what's pre recorded, adding on to the recording, and the, uh, leave what's out. Lucky to have a backup. I can't remember my text number, but I will get there. Just securing the perimeters, the monitors. Uh, get my medication on the 1st of July. That'll be good. Watch out, world. And Ryan, Chu, photography Pinker, Yellow, It's AI generated Barbie girls from Asia. Juice it up, mix it up. Let's get this track. Keep going. Here, where'd he talking about audience capture? of celebrities. He's half to often pretend to be someone else that they're not. And then, I'm connecting all that to how we have to be today, because of social media, and on the way of explaining that, I play a little bit of Alan Watts talking about society. If you don't know who Al Watts is, this is gonna be a mind blow for you. If you know who he is, then this is just gonna be a treat for you. Let's start with the Rogan stuff, and then we'll get into the rest. After me, I was hoping that he would bomb, and I remember thinking, like, What a bitch way to think that is. Yeah. Yeah. Ugh. Yeah. Like, they're such a bitch, so do you think? And then I completely shifted my perspective. 'Cause, like, you don't think like that with martial arts. Like, you can't think like that, you know, you can't think like that. Yeah. You can't think like that ever. That's, like, a weak thought. Yes. And I realised, like, Oh, this is, like, your brain trying to occupy itself with, you know, this time that's gonna be between you and your goal of doing something in comedy. And it's so far away, you suck. You're 21 years old, and you suck. So everybody else got to suck. So you want people to fail and you want to do better? Yeah. It's like, just a total scrambly, what I'm doing with my life thought. Yeah. And I realised, I was like, Oh, that's a good chance thought. But that is very normal for human beings. Oh, yeah. A lot of bitches out there. Yeah, like, we're kind of... To me, in general. Like, it takes more effort to not be a bitch, actually. especially if you have a job. So if you have a regular job job, like an office job, you will pretend to be a whole different person for eight hours, a fucking day, every day of your life that you're there. Yeah. That is a lot of time, both things. Yeah. And when you get out of all that bullsh, there's not much you left. Whatever could have been you never grew, because whatever could have been you was stifled by fluorescent lights and a fucking monitor. You want the severance, right? Oh, yeah. I mean, clearly, it's a metaphor for, There's a lot of things that go on to it. There's a lot going on with. And also, shut up, Ben Still, and I didn't even know Ben had this, like, level to him. I've always respected that. He was hilarious, making great comedy movies, but I didn't know he was, like, an avant garde storyteller, like... Right, right. I mean, also the way it's shot. brilliant. The first episode, every shot, I don't know who the DP is, like, we should find out who that guy is, but every shot has, like, perfect symmetry. Did you notice that? I didn't know. You dropped the screen. in a half. Every single shot. Really? It is masterpiece. And, uh, but I think about that, like, this idea, like, severing yourself? People are doing that at work anyway. 100%. That's what you're describing. They're this other person at work for eight hours a day. Yeah. They aren't their self. There a different identity. They make up these little terms. Like, this is my work wife. Well, that's why it's so easy to push, like, crazy, woke nonsense into an office space, 'cause people are already bullshitting. Oh, so if we're already pretending here, what else are we gonna pretend? What else do I have to do to keep this job? Yeah. What do I have to do to get a promotion? What do I have to do? Do I have to pretend that trans kids, what is it? Drab queen shows? Okay, I'm in. I'm in. Healthcare? Yes, I'm, like, whatever you want to call it. And it's gender affirming. Was that what we're calling it? Okay. It is interesting, like, to see how little pushback there is about from the workers, now that all these, like, programs are being wiped away. Well, the people that are losing their job are complaining hard. And then the senators are complaining hard, but everybody else is happy. Yeah, the people who've been faking it at work, that are still working there, are not, like, damn it. You know what I mean? They're just going, All right, I get to be, like, a little closer version to myself. That's very true. So, talking about severance, if you don't know what severance is, I'm not gonna spoil it and show any clips of it or anything, but it's basically a premise where people are at work. and they have a brain implant, predictive program named Elon Musk, They have a brain implant that separates them from their work, self, and their personal self. And that way, you're not feeling, you don't know anything about your personal self when you're at work.No thoughts on that at all. You're not dreading the day, and vice versa. It's really interesting, kind of like Black Mirror. Anyway, touching on what they were talking about, the whole idea is that we already have this brain chip in a way—our phones. Our phones, and maybe even our online presence. But it's mostly our phones, 100%. They create this strange separation for us, like we have one life at work and another on our phones. This separation is growing more and more, to the point where it's almost another reality. Oh, and I got cut off—phone, service, Centrelink, disability pension, and my bank all at the same time. It's like when you're a marked man, you're a marked man. They use things like sexual harassment accusations to silence people. It's part of a bigger system, endorsed by the government, to keep people quiet.
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