I hadn’t considered that that might have been why they made the API changes, which makes them make a bit more sense. But this really isn’t true, there are plenty of fake accounts on reddit — comment-stealers, mass-upvote accounts, product-advertising bots. Reddit is a prime example of a bot-infested shitshow, if only somewhat less than most designated social media.
There were 2 main reasons for the API changes.
1) To stop AI companies from just ripping the entire site for free. With the changes if they want to rip everything they have to pay reddit $$$.
2) To make it more difficult for AI's and bots to post by making it harder for them to "see" the site via just using the API to get a ton of data. This is important because if there are less AI's on the site then they can #1, sell what's on it to AI companies for more money.
Obviously it didn't get rid of all the bots,
but it made things harder.It seems that in the same way wikipedia developed, there would be an attempt to make useful AIs available without the profit motive being the primary use.
Yes, you can locally run AI's and there are some free and uncensored ones out there already that you can use.
The issue is that running LLMs is expensive and requires vast amounts of compute to create in the first place (GPT 4 cost more then a $100 million to train. 4.5/5 will cost billions or tens of billions). So even if its non-profit (and openAI is already non-profit) for anything past the bottom tier you will still have to pay them money cause they are so expensive to train and are too hefty to run on your local computer.
People really overestimate how humanlike these things are. Or maybe I just have a really good AI-dar compared to the rest of the population, I suppose.
The big thing is cost is going to go down. And down. And down.
Assuming that it cost $5 bucks for a single GPT 4 instance to post as much as everyone on the forum this year by 2030 it will cost less then a cent for the same thing. By 2034 its going to be 1/100th of a cent instead.
So it won't be "Yeah, I can tell if that individual poster is AI" its going to be "which one of the dozen posters on this page is an actual human". Pretty soon sorting through to find the actual humans is going to be a lot of work even if you *can* consistently tell if someone is human.
The contradictions really emit a strong salesman pitch smell to me, you should invest in our company we will be the next microsoft or apple. You prune the model you loose accuracy, so the ability to run more inference at the cost of the quality of the output: that's more like a fundamental law of the systems we are dealing with than technological progress. Seems like lowering the barrier of entry at the cost of accuracy was the actual economical move for them to make. So there must be such a notion as "good enough"; good enough to be paid for. No reason to assume they wouldn't just continue to deliver good enough, and benefit from technological advancements to increase their profit margins. They need to "grow" to exist afterall, and growth shall be measured in monetary terms, this is not a suggestion but a direct order, do not pass go and do not collect wisdom.
You could say the exact same things about computers. If someone will pay for a crappy 1950's computer why keep making new and better computers?
Well that's because people will pay *more* money for a newer better one and if you stop other companies will do it instead.
Its why people are still paying for GPT 4 when 3.5 (or any other one of a vast number of services) or why people buy fancy jewelry when they could just wear pop-rings, because if something is better its worth paying more money for.
And there is so so much money to be made, so they will keep on climbing to stay at the top of the heap, releasing new and better models.
Keep the subscription model, they love themselves the recurring payments. When you release a new version, how does the user measure the quality, it's really hard to be objective about this. What's not hard is selling new features to keep people hooked or justify different subscription tiers. "Now with image recognition", "now with TTS", upgrade for extended math features, try out our new browser extension blabla... You know that sort of stuff.
There are objective tests to measure how "intelligent" AI are. Of course as you say, telling the difference between similar level ones is tough, but for the layperson that's true for basically every product ever.
On Bay12? Honestly, unless we're talking about the occasional Escaped Lunatic who posts once and vanishes, none. I'm willing to bet money on this (not actually, for legal reasons).
Because a single one could very well post five times as much as every other person on the forum combined. And yet they clearly don't.
There are a few reasons for this, none of which will apply to AI in the end.
The first is that bots are (in the forumn context) too stupid to make money. Throw a ton of them out there and they just die and fail to accomplish anything. AI are much more capable of tricking people, and they can survive long enough to do so.
The second is that current CAPTCHA's and security mostly works. Actually getting past it requires effort, and effort= money. This will not apply to AI since they will be able to pass the same tests that the dumbest humans will be able to pass without requiring human involvement or time.
All it will take is costs doing down. Which they will. The corpos can't keep their oligopoly for long.
Nope, high tier AI is a big money game.
GPT 4 cost 100 million to train. Their next one will cost billions, possibly tens of billions as well as vast amounts of compute and vast databases worth of data. Eventually of course smaller groups will be able to train their own GPT 4 as costs decrease, but by then OpenAI/Facebook/Google will be training a new one that cost them fifty billion dollars even with the decreases.
Regular individuals and smaller groups have no way of competing in that arena.
E: I think AI still has a lot of easy advances left and in a few years will be vastly more capable. But even if that wasn't true and advancement stopped tomorrow and GPT 4 stays the most powerful AI forever its still going to present fundamental problems for the modern internet once prices go down enough.