iirc this article is referencing a court decision where "boneless" wings can have a certain amount of bone in them because the de-boning technology can't be expected to be perfect. It's real, but it's also being taken wildly out of context.
Thank you kind sir and/or madame for providing a great deal more education on the human skull trade than I had ever intended to pursue!
Not knowing just adds spice!
Anyway… how can you ethically source a skull and then sell it on the open market?
You pay an intern in your marketing department to write "ethically sourced" on all your customer facing surfaces.
I wonder if you can get it to say anything bad about any specific person. Might just be that they nuked the ability entirely to avoid lawsuits.
Calvin would be a CEO in today's economy.
Also, I’m shockingly infuriated that the tech workers that would end up being the ones replaced the soonest are so busy licking boots rather than throwing their shoes into the machinery.
Just because you aren't hearing about us, doesn't mean we don't exist. ;)
The really fucking dumb part of it, you can believe me or not, is that this appears to all circle back to ancient misunderstandings about the nature of man, and attempts to create automatons which behave like men but are perfectly obedient. There is a subset of the population which tries this exact same bullshit with every new technology we create.
Join a "fun league" sports team, take a community arts course, go to church, work for a volunteer organization, just to name a few ideas.
To be blunt, LLMs are one of the stupider ways to try and use AI. There is incredible potential in many other applications which don't attempt to interface with something as irrational and unpredictable as people.
so this is actually the best the AI researchers can do
Highly unlikely. This is what corporation's public facing products can do.
There is a certain point, however, where hopes for rehabilitation are set against too great a cost for public safety when the criminal is violent.