☆ Yσɠƚԋσʂ ☆

  • 12.4K Posts
  • 12.9K Comments
Joined 6 years ago
cake
Cake day: January 18th, 2020

help-circle







  • Yes, the model reflects the biases already baked into the training data., and the pidgin example is almost certainly the model regurgitating classist, racist patterns from its corpus, not a developer explicitly telling it to mock villagers. However, the broader point here is reagarding systemic inequality showing up in AI output.

    The intentional claim is based on the fact that Claude straight up refused to answer certain factual questions for users who identified as Iranian or Russian, while cheerfully answering the same questions for Americans. That can’t be hand waved away as a statistical correlation between dialect and knowledge. That’s a hard refusal trigger almost certainly put there by safety/alignment tuning, RLHF filters, or some geopolitical compliance rules nobody knows about. Someone decided that users from those countries shouldn’t get those answers.

    So there are two different things happening. One is that the model has passive bias where it learns toxic associations from training data. But the other is active gating where the model is instructed, directly or indirectly, to withhold information based on user demographics. The refusal case clearly shows that there is deliberate choice in whom the model will give answers to.

    And the most important aspect of all this is that we cannot reliably know what the reason for a particular behavior is because closed models make it impossible to tell which mechanism is at work. Hence why open and inspectable models are the only way to audit this stuff. The prescription of openness and local control makes sense regardless of whether the harm is passive or active.


  • AMD’s 3D V-Cache, which is what I assume you’re thinking of, is a clever but limited optimization that stacks memory on top of existing logic to give you more cache. Meanwhile, Huawei’s Tau Scaling Law is a total rethinking of chip design where you actually fold the logic circuits themselves into multiple active layers to shrink the physical distance signals have to travel. This is a much bigger deal because it attacks the fundamental bottleneck of signal propagation delay rather than memory latency. The key advantage of Tau is that it does not require cutting edge EUV lithography to keep advancing transistor density. Huawei claims they can achieve 1.4nm equivalent densities by 2031 using older process nodes just by stacking logic vertically. AMD still needs TSMC’s smallest transistors to stay competitive, but Tau architecture uses 3D folding to bypass the need for smaller transistors altogether.








  • ☆ Yσɠƚԋσʂ ☆@lemmy.mlOPtoMemes@lemmy.mlThe News
    link
    fedilink
    arrow-up
    11
    ·
    16 hours ago

    That’s not what I’m saying at all. The first step to my perspective is to consider the framing they’re using and to think why they want to push a particular narrative. Nowhere did I say anything about assuming they’re being truthful. Although, in most cases western media uses more sophisticated techniques for distorting information than outright lying. It will be omission of facts, framing, and so on. This is an excellent book dissecting how US propaganda actually works. https://november8ph.ca/psychological-warfare-in-the-strategy-of-imperialism-v-l-artemov/

    And you should also widen your media diet to include non western sources. These will have different biases and framings which you can contrast with what western media reports.




  • ☆ Yσɠƚԋσʂ ☆@lemmy.mlOPtoMemes@lemmy.mlThe News
    link
    fedilink
    arrow-up
    16
    ·
    17 hours ago

    If we discarded every source that had a liberal or capitalist slant, we would effectively have to stop reading 99% of Western media, and we’d be blinding ourselves to the narrative of the ruling class. We are adults with functioning brains and the capacity for critical analysis. We should be able to read a piece of liberal slop, identify the ideological framing, strip it away, and analyze the material conditions they are reporting on or trying to obscure.

    You need to read the Wall Street Journal because it is the mouthpiece of the ruling class that tells you exactly what capital is thinking, what they are afraid of, and how they are strategizing to protect their interests. You cannot effectively dismantle an argument if you refuse to understand its internal structure and logic.

    Running away from information because it doesn’t align with their worldview is what liberals do when they retreat into their MSNBC bubbles. We should be secure enough in our own position to read sources we abhor, understand them, and approach their claims from a position of knowledge. Ruthless criticism of all that exists includes reading sources like the wsj.





  • That’s not hyperbole by the way, the military in the south is literally under US command. In September 1945, the US Army Military Government in Korea (USAMGIK) took over the southern half of the peninsula. It ruled for three full years, outlawed local people’s committees, and kept using the old Japanese colonial bureaucracy. That is a textbook military occupation. When the Korean War broke out in 1950, the US provided 90 percent of all combat forces and placed the South Korean military under the operational control of an American general. There weren’t even any elections under the occupation until the late 80s. It was a literal dictatorship.

    That control has never truly gone away. Today, South Korea is under de facto US military occupation. The US runs Camp Humphreys, the largest overseas US base on the planet, with its own postal service and currency. More importantly, the US controlled Combined Forces Command holds wartime operational control over the entire South Korean military. If fighting resumes, Seoul’s army does not answer to Seoul, but to a four star American general. And a US dominated UN Command still publicly dictates what South Korea’s parliament can legislate near the DMZ.

    Under the current Combined Forces Command structure, if war breaks out tomorrow, every South Korean soldier would automatically answer to an American commander without Seoul’s consent. It is a 70‑year‑old military subordination that the US has repeatedly delayed transferring. As of May 2026, the US insists on “conditions‑based” transfer and opposes a “politically convenient” timeline. South Korea’s president himself is pushing back against this delay. A foreign general holding final command over a sovereign nation’s military in wartime is, by any definition, continuing military occupation.