Hackworth

joined 3 months ago
[–] Hackworth@sh.itjust.works 3 points 2 hours ago* (last edited 1 hour ago)

As a professional artist, time and money are always a concern of my employer. The process is fundamentally unimportant to them; it's the result that matters. We need a different word for the personal meaning of artistic process in service of the muse rather than money. As a chaote, I'd just call it magic, but that word has a lot of baggage.

[–] Hackworth@sh.itjust.works 12 points 21 hours ago (8 children)

No Gods or Kings or Mans.

Only Dinosaur.

[–] Hackworth@sh.itjust.works 1 points 6 days ago

Cyberpunk Circuses

[–] Hackworth@sh.itjust.works 11 points 6 days ago* (last edited 6 days ago) (3 children)

One of the few reliable uses of an LLM is brainstorming, as a wall to bounce ideas off of, or more accurately a semantic mirror. In low-stakes situations (like a writer thinking about their story from a different perspective), you're essentially probing the latent space for interesting connections between meanings. It'll default to the most common, generic connections, of course. So if the writer wants to tease through more surprising possibilities, they'll quickly learn to direct the model to less well-worn territories. It rarely even requires anything approaching jailbreaking methods like U$1||G 1337 5P34K.

If we think of an LLM as something akin to an external imagination, we can interpret interactions with it with some maturity and honesty. If we think of an LLM as an oracle, or a friend, or a lover, or what have you - we're signing a contract with the Fae Folk. The Childlike Empress makes no distinction between good and evil beings of Fantastica, as they all must live in the imaginations of mankind. In high-stakes situations, this kind of imaginitive freedom can have (and does have) enormous consequences.

I see some similarities in the way that the "Doom Caused Columbine" conversation happened early on. And just as that resulted in the establishment of the ESRB, hopefully this incident (and others like it) will lead to some reform. But I don't know exactly what that reform needs to look like. I think education is helpful, but I don't think it's enough. We largely know about the harms of social media and it is no less of an issue. Guardrails can kind of be set up, but the only way to do it presently (technically speaking) is hamfisted and ineffective. And adults are no more immune to the potential harms of abusing an LLM than they're immune to being influenced by advertisements.