

Oncotarget is a respectable journal as far as I know, but yeah feels a bit sensational. Their sample is also tiny of only 300 people.


oops thanks, added to the post


You might want to learn what words like reactionary actually mean before using them. We are discussing an open source tool, which by its nature lacks the built-in constraints you are describing. Your argument is a piece of sophistry designed to create the illusion of expertise on a subject you clearly do not understand. You are not engaging with the reality of the technology, but with a simplified caricature of it.


Technology such as LLMs is just automation and that’s what the base is, how it is applied within a society is what’s dictated by the uperstructure. Open source LLMs such as DeepSeek are a productive force, and a rare instance where a advanced means of production is directly accessible for proletarian appropriation. It’s a classic base level conflict over the relations of production.


Oh I’ve seen the interview with Postol, that was pretty good.


Nah, I don’t think I’m going to take as gospel what a CIA asset say.

Instead, go read Marx to understand the relationship between the technology and the social relations that dictate its use within a society.


stay mad


Elections are just the surface of the problem. The real issue is who owns the factories and funds the research. In the West that’s largely done by private capital, putting it entirely outside the sphere of public debate. Even universities are heavily reliant on funding from companies now, which obviously influences what their programs focus on.


not that I know, but would be neat to see that


that’s true yeah


or maybe it’s the capitalist relations and not the technology that’s the actual problem here
behold the least brainwashed wasp everybody
this evidence ignoramus
90% of families in the country own their home giving China one of the highest home ownership rates in the world. What’s more is that 80% of these homes are owned outright, without mortgages or any other leans. https://www.forbes.com/sites/wadeshepard/2016/03/30/how-people-in-china-afford-their-outrageously-expensive-homes
Chinese household savings hit another record high in 2024 https://www.wsj.com/livecoverage/stock-market-today-dow-jones-bank-earnings-01-12-2024/card/chinese-household-savings-hit-another-record-high-xqyky00IsIe357rtJb4j
Social mobility in China being far better than in the US https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2018/11/18/world/asia/china-social-mobility.html
The typical Chinese adult is now richer than the typical European adult https://www.businessinsider.com/typical-chinese-adult-now-richer-than-europeans-wealth-report-finds-2022-9
The real (inflation-adjusted) incomes of the poorest half of the Chinese population increased by more than four hundred percent from 1978 to 2015, while real incomes of the poorest half of the US population actually declined during the same time period. https://www.nber.org/system/files/working_papers/w23119/w23119.pdf
From 2010 to 2019 (the most recent period for which uninterrupted data is available), the income of the poorest 20% in China increased even as a share of total income. https://data.worldbank.org/indicator/SI.DST.FRST.20?end=2019&%3Blocations=CN&%3Bstart=2008
Real wage (i.e. the wage adjusted for the prices you pay) has gone up 4x in the past 25 years, more than any other country. This is staggering considering it’s the most populous country on the planet. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Cw8SvK0E5dI
Meanwhile, billionaires are fleeing China https://www.firstpost.com/explainers/china-billionaires-declining-rich-list-13830670.html
oh no the lib bible disagrees in face of all evidence, must be true 🤣


Russia is definitely sending a message here, I thought it was interesting that abc doesn’t mention it by name though.
They’re absolutely not useless. The trick is to figure out how to use them effectively. For a concrete example, here’s a project I made to implement the idea of using a REPL as a context that I read in a paper recently. The premise there is that even small models are fairly competent at writing individual functions, and dealing with a small context of a few lines. So, instead of feeding large documents into these models which break them, you can instead provide them with an API to interrogate the document by writing code. And sure enough, the idea works. I managed to get qwen2.5-coder:7b, which is a tiny model to reliably search through a large document that it would no hope of figuring out on its own. Here’s what a run of it looks like:
so in just 3 calls with very small contexts, it managed to find the answer correctly and it does it reliably.
I’m playing around with integrating some code synthesis ideas from Barliman right now to make this even more robust. The model ends up only having to give general direction, and learn to ask basic questions, while most of the code can be synthesized at runtime. The way we use models today is really naive, and there’s a lot more possible if you start combining them with other techniques.