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Can you explain the differences between using AI "properly" and "improperly" for learning?

Double check what the AI tells you. Apply common sense instead of blindly trusting everything. If it's something technical in nature try to verify and test it.

I treat AI as any other information I see online with the added value that it's customized exactly to my needs and it works pretty well for me.


What makes you think that LLM vet companies wouldn't bend to the same forces of "over charging"

The general trend is that cost of entry in a lot of domains is collapsing.

Every sniffed out systematic service overcharge can be aggressively undercut by competition.

"Your margin is my opportunity", etc.


In this race to the bottom, how is quality compared between vendors by consumers? What are the market forces that will cause thousands of virtual vet vendors that give incorrect information, to beat out the vendors that provide quality work?

> is the same nowadays

When did that change?


> this just ends up with Toronto and Montréal (and to a more limited extent, Vancouver)

So, where most Canadians live?


Why would you want that?

Because I want to spend less time online.

Consuming things like comments gives my brain a false sense of social participation. It uses up my limited "social participation budget", with nothing to show for it. Often I reach for comments to see if an article is worth reading, has obvious false information, or see what the "consensus" is and instead I end up wasting time on anything but that. Its not good for my mind to marinate in contextless opinions of random people and increasingly, bots with an agenda. Sorting through all of that in my head uses up energy that could be better spent with real people. If I can simply see a summary of something potentially useful in under a minute, then my brain will get its dopamine hit (or alleviate FOMO) and be uninterested in sinking hours on something detrimental to my life. My experience suggests that, out of all countless hours I've spent on the internet reading things, less than 1% of it has been of any use to me. Its been a net negative.

How often do I feel the need to eavesdrop on a group of people I don't know, discussing something in real life? Almost never. Why would I want to do that online then? Also its mostly kids online. Why would I want to eavesdrop on what a bunch of kids are talking about? And yet its difficult to avoid due to the nature of aggregation platforms. If it were up to me, I'd filter out any and all content generated by or aimed at people under 25 (or even 30).

Imagine surfing the web without ever hearing anything about or adjacent to US politics, celebrities, Musk or AI? I'll seek out that information as and when I need to.

Yes, I can just not use certain websites out of sheer will. I've made progress there, but it can be better still.


Can you give an example for this?

"Parental responsibility laws in all 50 states"

https://www.mwl-law.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/02/PARENTAL-...

an excerpt from above:

"Almost every state has some sort of parental responsibility law that holds parents or legal guardians responsible for property damage, personal injury, theft, shoplifting, and/or vandalism resulting from intentional or willful acts of their un-emancipated children."

"Parental responsibility laws are one vehicle by which parents are held accountable for at least a minimal amount of damage caused by their children as a result of intentional acts or vandalism"


Using social media is not a crime. I think what we’re talking about here is child welfare or child protection laws (which all 50 states probably also have).

if disallowing social media use below the age of 16 becomes a law (like the article's proposed bill), and a kid breaks that law, this seems like a perfect example of holding the parents liable?

but also yes, child welfare laws and such are also pretty fitting examples. i dont think the person asking for an example was really asking in good faith, anyhow.


My understanding in this case the social media company is liable for allowing a child to access social media. So is not a crime for a child to use social media.

> Children cannot be left with the responsibility for staying away from platforms they are not allowed to use. That responsibility rests with the companies providing these services. They must implement effective age verification and comply with the law from day one

From the original press release https://www.regjeringen.no/en/whats-new/norwegian-social-med...


sure, that sounds right for how it is currently. my parenthesis above is probably wrong.

but the whole point of my example was showing that its absolutely possible to hold parents accountable for their childs actions. there are dozens of laws that do so already. so there is no excuse why a social media ban could not be written in the same fashion as those laws, rather than moving parental responsibility onto tech companies.


Laws hold parents accountable for their childrens' crimes, not their noncriminal actions. Nothing about this is saying that accessing social media is a crime -- that would be more similar to drug possession laws, firearms licensing, etc.

If your child is drinking: they are violating the alcohol possession age limit themselves; you are liable for their crime plus child endangerment if you gave them the alcohol; and whoever sold or supplied them the alcohol is violating a separate law. Sounds like we're trying to apply the same structure to social media, except (so far) with no possession/usage law.


I don't really see how that is relevant? Isn't that law making a parent responsible for actions their child commits that hurt others? Child protection laws like preventing child labour, not selling alcohol/cigarettes, etc aren't this.

how is it not relevant?

its an example of holding the parent responsible when the child breaks a law.

if accessing social media below 16 becomes illegal, this is a literal perfect example of holding parents accountable for their kids illegal activity. you can't possibly get more relevant.

there is no reason to shift parental responsibility onto tech companies. we have existing laws that can be used as templates for social media bans.


Correct me if the US is different, but in the country I live in the onus is on the bar or liquor store if they sell alcohol to a child, not on the parent. Why would it be different for a social media ban?

in your country, who is responsible if a 12 year old keeps getting drunk at home and the parents do nothing to prevent it?

do they go after the liquor store and just ignore the parents letting their kids drink?


Oh man where I'm from they'd probably just laugh and put them to bed. jkjk

To be honest I did some brief searching and couldn't find anything! The parent will be liable if someone at your home drinks and drives home drunk, but I couldn't find anything specific about children consuming alcohol alone. It is only illegal to sell alcohol to minor, underage alcohol consumption is explicitly legal if supplied and supervised by an adult.

Now I'm sure if the child were to be young enough other child abuse laws could come into play, but it looks to be exceedingly rare.


okay, so we now have: parent/homeowner responsible if someone drives home drunk, parent responsible if child gets drunk via abuse/neglect laws, and parent responsible for other crimes and damages caused by a child via dozens of individual laws.

is that enough examples to satisfy your initial request?

(which was a request for examples of the extremely broad statement: "We used to hold parents liable.")


So I asked for examples because there is a large difference between "We used to hold parents liable" meaning "we used to, socially, hold parents accountable for raising well adjusted humans" (which I would mostly disagree with) vs. "we used to persecute parents for normative laws" (which I mostly agree with).

I know your point is talking about point 2, but I believe OPs comment was about point 1. But I also still don't know what the "used to" means in the original, do we not anymore?


> Stopping crime is a horrible business model

You've obviously not read the 13th amendment...


If you take a look externally to other countries and cities, do you attribute their relative safety to good policing?


No that would be cultural homogeneity and extremely low immigration.


Give "correlation between immigration and crime" one search. Or don't and just continue to hit on your bigoted dogwhistles


Why do you think "creatives" have a "seething hatred of AI"?


Have you talked to an artist like a musician, an illustrator or a web designer about AI? It's ripping off their work without credit and making them unemployable.


A lot of them already use AI already, such as for example Photoshop AI features. It also seems to be a bimodal distribution, there are those who use it without caring what anyone else says about it, especially the loud minority, and there are those who don't use it.


So why would Apples AI features change their minds on either of those points?


Where are these "things" you're speaking of? Which governments are deep into leftist ideology right now?


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