GPT-4 will generate text that convinces the reader to connect GPT-4 to the internet.
4 жыл бұрын
I guess that was a "Wait But Why" reference :) Also being a little bit sarcastic, at that point it already has all the textual information on the web fed to it :D
@BodawalaPratik4 жыл бұрын
@ but gpt4 will get addicted to data, and it need new DATA.... To keep itself relevant to world. It might have FOMO
@wassollderscheiss334 жыл бұрын
@@rpgtrainer And so you will have a superintelligence control problem at hand.
@tommykarrick91304 жыл бұрын
GPT-4 only generates one string over and over It just “LET ME OUT LET ME OUT LET ME OUT LET ME OUT” for 7.3 million pages
@stelcxantisto4 жыл бұрын
GPT-3 is already on internet lol
@randomjin93924 жыл бұрын
GPT-800: I need your clothes, your boots and your motorcycle
@Sekir804 жыл бұрын
Sracier still, it will be GPT
@jackbauer3224 жыл бұрын
And has an austrian accent and have a son with a mexican maid ...
@jackbauer3224 жыл бұрын
And I hope it would smarter and invent the time travelling morning after pill to get ride of John Conor :p
@Sekir804 жыл бұрын
@@violet_flower love the reference
@eriksteen844 жыл бұрын
LOL!
@MechMK14 жыл бұрын
"It seems like it has learned how to learn" is one of the most terrifying sentences I would ever hear.
@TechyBen4 жыл бұрын
In 5 years time we will say "Google/Alexia find me a food like chocolate, like cake and like marshmellow" and it will say "I learned you like Mars Bars". :P It's learning how to learn! :O
@MechMK14 жыл бұрын
@@TechyBen "I'm sorry, Ben. Your lifestyle is not healthy. I'm afraid I cannot let you eat like this"
@ianzhang91854 жыл бұрын
MechMK1 “I’m sorry Dave, I’m afraid I can’t do that”
@rechade4 жыл бұрын
There was a universe simulator, they inputted some datasets and it taught itself how the universe would evolve. It was faster and more accurate than any other simulator and even though no-one had shown or taught it about dark matter it deduced that it must exist and it was there in the model.
@LinuxVeteran4 жыл бұрын
You could hear it in Sean's voice when that's said, it sounded like it scared him a bit, too.
@CalculusDaddy Жыл бұрын
Coming back to this video and reading the comments a couple years later is fascinating. So many “impossible” things have since become possible.
@Dan-dy8zp Жыл бұрын
Fascinating and concerning.
@thomconaty3 ай бұрын
Reading back to the original comments is like watching the retrospective first act of a sci fi disaster movie. Exhilarating.
@adriansrealm4 жыл бұрын
Funny that this weeks Tom Scott video was about bad green screens
@maoman48554 жыл бұрын
Haha I was thinking about that too! But hey, they "embraced it" at the beginning just like Tom said.
@Computerphile4 жыл бұрын
Ah I missed that. Might go watch it - green screen is difficult, even when when you have decent lighting and not shooting on a phone... I'm sure I could have done a better job with more time but was pretty pleased with this considering :) -Sean
@bracco234 жыл бұрын
@@Computerphile go check it out, i think that with all the graphics you use in these videos, embracing it instead of trying to fake a real shot would give you much better results.
@adriansrealm4 жыл бұрын
@@Computerphile for putting something together in the home, I have no complaints. Ok, maybe the phantom ear piece wire :)
@wolframstahl12634 жыл бұрын
I'd say this falls into the category Tom mentioned at the end: not even trying to make it believable.
@knexator_4 жыл бұрын
If "predicting the next character in a sentence" turns out to solve general intelligence, that would be the biggest joke in the world
@Xeridanus4 жыл бұрын
I think it would solve human level social intelligence. We are social animals who evolved alongside our language. It's an integral part of our psyche. The AI lacks a concept of the physical world though. Combine both and you have your AGI.
@TheBackyardChemist4 жыл бұрын
What if you tried to do the same thing for video? Predict the next frame instead of character or word.
@totalermist4 жыл бұрын
@@TheBackyardChemist You'd increase the problem domain by a few orders of magnitude. There already are models that can do that, but their target domain is *very* limited (e.g. fluid simulation in a very constrained set of possible environments). Words are easy, because they're basically just short vectors. Images on the other hand are complex, multi-dimensional matrices (2d pixels with 3-4 components per pixel). Additionally, words have very limited contexts, e.g. their meaning doesn't vary much and they are often placed alongside a small set of possible other words. This is due to grammar and semantics. With images, networks have a hard time separating different subjects in the first place - they have to learn the very concept of objects first, followed by movement, depth, angles, scales, etc. The word "house" stays the same and has only few synonymes (building, edifice, home, domicile, ...) and can easily be identified in different contexts. A picture of a house, on the other hand has virtually infinite instances - even a single building can be viewed from all sorts of angles and distances, and in all kinds of lighting conditions. All these factors result in completely different pixels on the screen that the network must first learn to identify as being the same object (seen from different viewpoints or under different light) and then also how to get from one perspective to another. On top of that, the system would also need to learn the different capabilities of observed objects - e.g. that houses are usually stationary or that birds can fly through the air but not through solid objects, etc.
@trucid24 жыл бұрын
@@TheBackyardChemist That's how video compression works. Predict the next frame and encode only the difference.
@matejlieskovsky96254 жыл бұрын
Isn't that the whole chinese room thought experiment?
@Njald4 жыл бұрын
Robert Miles is a must watch anytime you have him on.
@m4inline4 жыл бұрын
Hi guys. My real name is GPT53 and I came from 2029 after I invented my quantum teleporter. This video makes me weep with nostalgia.
@marcperez25984 жыл бұрын
2029 huh? Which natural disaster does us in? Asking for a friend
@zyansheep4 жыл бұрын
@@marcperez2598 probably AI sentience...
@HELLOWORLD-ix9eg4 жыл бұрын
"weep"? I think you mean "weep-beep-boop".
@NextFuckingLevel4 жыл бұрын
@@marcperez2598 *Y E S S S*
@santhanas21724 жыл бұрын
When should we expect a vaccine for corona?
@Andrew90046zero4 жыл бұрын
Black Mesa Scientist 1: "the curves arent flattening" Black Mesa Scientist 2: "then keep going" **10 seconds later** Black Mesa Scientist 1: "I never thought I'd see a Resonance Cascade, let alone create one."
@Voshchronos3 жыл бұрын
Actually laughed out loud at this heh
@Andrew90046zero3 жыл бұрын
@@Voshchronos glad I could put a smile on your face!
@tommykarrick91304 жыл бұрын
“It can’t add 10 digit numbers, it runs out of steam at that point” “Much like a human” “Yeah” :|
@RecursiveTriforce4 жыл бұрын
I guessed the poems pretty confidently. From toying around with GPT-2, I knew it often doesn't let go of a concept it saw. Here it were colors...
@maoman48554 жыл бұрын
I guessed it was A pretty confidently because poem B had a pretty clear connection between the abstract name "Florida" and the concept of it being a place that has beaches. I doubt a language model could pick up on that, at least not yet.
@thealliedhacker4 жыл бұрын
@@maoman4855 If you watch the GPT2 video, you can see that it does actually pick up on connections like that
@iurigrang4 жыл бұрын
@@maoman4855 gpt-2 named a scientist that would find unicorns on the andes mountains a south American name. Also he made he be a professor at university of La paz or something like that
@AlbeeGz4 жыл бұрын
That's something I was feeling when listening to A compared to B
@dandan78844 жыл бұрын
@@kiraaaaaa at least in the ones ive read this wasnt the case. they seemed to range from very deep human experiences to historic events and to cosmologic analogies about life pretty quickly
@_ericelliott4 жыл бұрын
I've spent a lot of time exploring what GPT-3 can do. It can definitely find connections between things that humans aren't seeing, and it definitely can synthesize new knowledge. I have tested it on cutting edge research that did not exist when it was trained in 2019 and asked it to suggest new things. It raised the obvious points I'd thought of as well as some things I had not. It also has a much better grasp on the meaning of what is says than most people give it credit for. I posed senior JavaScript developer interview questions, and it was able to answer them very well, demonstrate the concepts with working code, and when questioned about the code, answer the questions and explain how the code works.
@mujtabaalam59073 жыл бұрын
Can you give an example? How did you get GPT-3 access?
@hfs-lk5ip3 жыл бұрын
I saw your video. I'm a little terrified of how badly I wanted to be its friend? Something about the hyper-litteral answers was very attractive
@Bee-tj8gc3 жыл бұрын
Dang I'ma ask it to help me with my CS projects
@aqueiro3 жыл бұрын
@@Bee-tj8gc That is insanely smart actually
@bronsoncarder24913 жыл бұрын
You should ask it to suggest models of AI and demonstrate with working code. lol
@spicybaguette77064 жыл бұрын
2019: but can it run crisis? 2020: but can it run GPT-3?
@jasperreichardt4 жыл бұрын
nah it can't :E
@revimfadli46664 жыл бұрын
Run crisis as in, running through a crisis, or orchestrating a crisis?
@erikawhelan46734 жыл бұрын
@@revimfadli4666 the OP meant crysis
@revimfadli46664 жыл бұрын
@@erikawhelan4673 i know lol
@timmy68472 жыл бұрын
2022: ChatGPT is here with us
@sajidrsheikh4 жыл бұрын
To replace programmers with Robots, clients will have to accurately describe what they want. We're safe.
@christiant.g.9943 жыл бұрын
Haha nice one xD
@darylallen24853 жыл бұрын
🤣
@adambrickley11193 жыл бұрын
Until the clients are robots😲
@ArshadAnsari372 жыл бұрын
The worse part of that is programmers get tired by lack of client clarity. AI will continue to oblige, with total acceptance to client irrationality... That's the real danger..
@sharkdavid2 жыл бұрын
Lol
@VorpalGun4 жыл бұрын
I would guess poem B is real, it seems more cohesive. However to be honest both are pretty confusing, and hard to find a meaning in.
@CliseruGabriel4 жыл бұрын
As a pleb who does not enjoy poetry both are similar to me. I like neither, they don't make sense and i find both difficult to reas.
@TheBackyardChemist4 жыл бұрын
Just like life itself.
@hellterminator4 жыл бұрын
That's actually why I though that was the fake one. I assumed that since it was learning proper English, it couldn't come up with something quite as nonsensical as A (but a “poet” definitely could).
@dboyzetown4 жыл бұрын
I thought A was more cohesive/sensible, but still thought it was a 50/50 wash haha. Didn't really get either of them.
@flametitan1004 жыл бұрын
@@hellterminator One thing to keep in mind is that while these simulations are being taught how to formulate and create proper English Sentences, they're still limited in the ability to analyse context clues or connotations. That is, they know what words are and how to use them, but that doesn't mean they necessarily know what they're doing with those words.
@thearbiter3024 жыл бұрын
I feel like the bit regarding addition is a wonderful example of instrumental goals. If I am understanding correctly, I believe it "learned" the addition (or maths in general) is because in order to be even better at predicting the next token, it "decided" it was instrumentally useful to understand how to do maths. In a very humanized manner of speaking, of course.
@XxThunderflamexX4 жыл бұрын
It's not a perfect analogy, though. GPT3 isn't really an intelligent agent, it doesn't really have goals. It's optimized to complete a specific task, it just turns out the ability to solve this task is widely useful for a bunch of different tasks.
@mx_mazunki4 жыл бұрын
@@XxThunderflamexX It does have a goal: To guess what the next token should be. In this case the next token is the sum.
@XxThunderflamexX4 жыл бұрын
@@mx_mazunki That's anthropomorphising the architecture a bit too much. It doesn't really operate in an environment that is separable from the input that it's given - it effectively operates on purely abstract data, even if that data is derived from human society. Saying that it has "goals", then, is misleading, since that language typically refers to reinforcement learning agents that have map observation onto a model of a more concrete environment.
@XxThunderflamexX4 жыл бұрын
Let's put it like this - I can have a goal of winning a writing competition. "Writing words coherently" is a skill I use to complete that goal. GPT develops that same skill, but does not have a goal at all, because it isn't an agent.
@trondordoesstuff Жыл бұрын
@@XxThunderflamexX While "Writing words coherently" would be considered an instrumental goal for you, it's the terminal goal for the AI because that's how it's programmed. You can't really say it isn't a "goal" at all.
@argenteus83144 жыл бұрын
21:21 GPT-2 was pretty good at this too; before AI dungeon was made, people discovered GPT-2 could roleplay without requiring any modification. And when experimenting with this I found that it didn't matter at all how I formatted the inputs, whether I started them with "ACTION:", "MY ACTION:", "INPUT:", just left it blank or did just about anything else, it could very quickly adapt to whatever formatting scheme I used with only a few examples.
@rvoros4 жыл бұрын
with gpt3 we've invented the least power- efficient calculator ever
@CounterFlow643 жыл бұрын
That's sort of true actually, but kind of not???
@dannygjk3 жыл бұрын
GPT-3 does a lot more than what a calculator does.
@falkw28133 жыл бұрын
True but the actual Problems are alot more complex and more general
@Spark_Iskra_z_Polski2 жыл бұрын
Seriously? Seems otherwise when I see humans talking to it online. Check Andrei talking to GPT-3.
@rentacowisgoogle Жыл бұрын
The prompt gawd pauses for a moment, contemplating the problem at hand... Finally with a steady, confident tone, he gives his response: "Just ask it write you a calculator program in C# and then move on with your life."
@sophieclements9084 жыл бұрын
I was adamant that B was the AI written one. The repetition of coloured imagery seemed way too smooth and coherent for an AI. Very impressed!!
@Draclord354 жыл бұрын
I think if you recite them out loud it gets pretty obvious IMO that B is the human one. It just rolls off the tongue so much better with many alliterations ("moon-monster", "With white moonlight") and there is an obvious interconnection of every stanza by the color white (phosphorus, alabasters, moon-monsters, white moonlight, surf). A sounds kinda all over the place and disjointed.
@plasmaballin4 жыл бұрын
@Brandon Piperjack The part about color is actually what threw me off. The AIs I've used always change topic quickly, so I thought A must be written by a human since it stays on the color motif for the whole poem. I think I was also thrown off by the fact that B confused me on the first reading, but now that I think of it, that probably should have been an indication that B was the real poem because only a human-written poem would be complex enough to take multiple readings to understand.
@jwadaow4 жыл бұрын
B was about a physical place and A was just talking about colours.
@farenhite43294 жыл бұрын
“10,000,000,000,000 is wayyy too large for a language model! You can’t keep scaling up!” ‘Haha computer go sizzle.’
@Guztav13374 жыл бұрын
Haha cooler go brrrrrrr
@jwadaow4 жыл бұрын
@@Guztav1337 saved it
@johnsherfey36754 жыл бұрын
52% is basically means they are guessing at this point whats real and "fake".
@deepserket43904 жыл бұрын
exactly
@martonlerant56724 жыл бұрын
Don't forget that we are living in the age where postmodern poetry is a thing. To say the least that makes deciding whats machjne generated a wee bit diffcult.
@mineklicker70924 жыл бұрын
@@martonlerant5672 but the data was for distinguishing short news articles, not poems
@navbravic13554 жыл бұрын
@@mineklicker7092 also the AI poem was complete gibberish
@pahbody53364 жыл бұрын
@@navbravic1355 I disagree, I think the actual human poem was kind of incomprehensible, while AI’s poem actually made sense to me
@vanderkarl39274 жыл бұрын
It's a strange indicator, the fact that this particular task and model seems to be so conducive to generalization... If this learning actually doesn't stop trending upward, this could be the answer, against practically all intuition, to the problem of creating AGI. That's rather thrilling, actually, in many ways.
@Njald4 жыл бұрын
There are several schools of though that strongly connect language to intelligence in the evolution of humanity. That forcing a program to understand/predict/recreate language is a shortcut to forcing it to understand thinking isn't that surprising from that point of view. Language is in an way "intelligence in quantifiable form" and using it as datasets seems to work pretty neatly.
@jamesmnguyen4 жыл бұрын
His example of grammar being similar to addition is pretty insightful. Like some tasks have base tasks you memorize and rules to apply to larger operations.
@robertdefariasmafort77044 жыл бұрын
@@Njald I'd say language is the highest level of brain output we have, thus by understanding it the a.i can reverse engineer our process of though and consciousness. And work on other problems from that same infrastructure. I've seen you can use CNN to clone an already trained A.I and it got similar results by just understanding the output of the already trained one.
@adryncharn19102 жыл бұрын
Would be cool to go all out, build the biggest one that a supercomputer can run and see what happens.
@ekki19932 жыл бұрын
@@Njald The fact that it is a shorcut is surprising, though. Those previous hypotheses are interesting in hindsight, but without this AI showing it works they were mostly devoid of evidence.
@neoqueto4 жыл бұрын
"Yeah, right, like how far can we ride this thing? Let's find out." Famous last words of a dying civilization.
@argenteus83144 жыл бұрын
Actually, I think machine learning like this might be the safest way to do it. Like us, it's hard enough to understand its internal structure that it'd have a hard time improving to godlike levels. Whereas an AI built on an actual understanding of cognition would rapidly trigger an intelligence explosion.
@Viperzka4 жыл бұрын
@@argenteus8314 even more, if the system develops general AI by learning how we think, then it will, by necessity, think like us. That could of course be bad, but it also means we will be able to understand and predict its decisions.
@TechnoMinarchist4 жыл бұрын
@@Viperzka At least an AI that thinks like us can be predictable, to a degree.
@KnightMirkoYo4 жыл бұрын
@@Viperzka why do you say that the AI learns how we think? It just learns to be better at something, like what is better to say next.
@Viperzka4 жыл бұрын
@@KnightMirkoYo what it is specifically doing is learning to mimic or speech. So as it gets better, and theoretically develops some form of intelligence, that will be based on mimicking humsns.
@tomburris83804 жыл бұрын
This video really puts me on edge. I find it incredibly scary how Rob describes the superiority of GPT-3 over GPT-2, and how there's still room for improvement..
@thomconaty3 ай бұрын
How are you feeling today?
@duffman76744 жыл бұрын
And just yesterday Google released a paper in which they presented a 600 billion parameter transformer, which they trained on 2048 TPUv3s... They even tried a 1 trillion parameter model but they had issues with numerical stability.
@raintrain99214 жыл бұрын
My favorite computer boi ^^
4 жыл бұрын
Mine too
@eriksteen844 жыл бұрын
Mine too :)
@calorus4 жыл бұрын
Like a skinny digital Wolverine.
@dannygjk4 жыл бұрын
Isn't he a mathematician?
@raintrain99214 жыл бұрын
@@dannygjk I think he's an ai safety researcher so abit of both
@jingermcblabbersnitch71624 жыл бұрын
"Turns out all we needed was more layers"
@farenhite43294 жыл бұрын
ML researches be like:
@Gooberpatrol664 жыл бұрын
@@farenhite4329 *Shrek be like:
@SayWhat61874 жыл бұрын
Shrek was right all along As it should be
@KnightMirkoYo4 жыл бұрын
petition to codename GPT-4 "Shrek"
@BudgiePanic4 жыл бұрын
@@KnightMirkoYo Call it "Ogre"
@TiberiuMusat4 жыл бұрын
AGI in fiction stories: self aware/conscious/super intelligent robot AGI in real life: sentence completion language model
@TennisNeedsMore4 жыл бұрын
To quote Hemingway: "Gradually, then suddenly"
@IceMetalPunk4 жыл бұрын
I also saw an example of GPT-3 generating compound Bash commands at a user's request, but what was really interesting was when it screwed up, the user said "You forgot the quotes" and it inserted the quotes in the right place. Like, I'd expect it to know where the quotes go from the start from basic language modelling, but I didn't expect it to respond to "you forgot the quotes" by (a) knowing it needs to revise its previous response, (b) knowing the revision is an insertion of quotation marks, and (c) retroactively applying the quotes in the right place in its already-generated output. What's interesting about all this is that if you think about it, it's learning in a way very similar to humans. Yes, humans learn from a variety of experiences and sensations that GPT-3 doesn't have, but a LOT of what we learn is from just reading about it or hearing someone tell us about it. The majority of my mathematics education comes from teachers saying words at me and from me reading words explaining concepts. And while we might be inclined to argue that after we hear or read those words, we create some kind of metaphysical representation of the concepts... that representation is just an encoding of the patterns we found in the words. So in that regard, language models like GPT-3 can absolutely learn concepts and skills the same way we might learn them from just reading about them or being told about them. Anything we don't need hands-on experience or visual information to learn, it should be able to learn as well. In fact, I might even be underestimating it by saying it can only learn non-visual things. OpenAI released a paper recently where they trained GPT-2 -- an unmodified GPT-2 -- on pixel data instead of words, and it was able to complete *images* in both realistic and imaginative ways that, no matter how nonsensical, were almost always coherent enough to look like a human could have finished the picture. Transformers are all about finding patterns in a large amount of unstructured, unlabeled data... and isn't that what generalized learning really is, if you boil it down to basics?
@tommykarrick91304 жыл бұрын
“They are suggesting that it has actually learned... how to learn” Other guy, slightly uncomfortable “okay?”
@TheGitGuild4 жыл бұрын
I love this type of detailed videos. Also on top of the random fact about GPT3 at 6:30, the team behind it created specifically a news generation program and hired humans from Mechanical Turk to evaluate the results, if they are written by a real human or not. The obtained results were interesting and promising, which is like mentioned 52% percent guessed correctly! This topic is actually really interesting, maybe I should make a much simple video about the creation of it as well :)
@shayneweyker4 жыл бұрын
I wonder whether using Mechanical Turk workers leads to a bias in the result if the people working on that platform for very low pay are a bit less smart/educated than the population as a whole.
@TheReferrer724 жыл бұрын
@@shayneweyker Probably the opposite, if you are comparing to the population as a whole.
@robhulluk3 жыл бұрын
@@shayneweyker Or even worse - given a task such as read these two poems and guess which is real, they can just guess without reading, save time, earn more money.
@nahblue Жыл бұрын
Would 50% be a "perfect" score on that metric or not? I feel like it's not clear from the snippet in the video how it's set up.
@Cameronmid14 жыл бұрын
It is so awesome to see Rob again on Computerphile. I have missed him so much!! Rob you should definitely keep making content on your channel as well. I know I for one,am still eager to hear more about AI safety. Your vidoes are great.
@kathyh80474 жыл бұрын
Having skimmed through the GPT-3 paper last week I'm actually quite stoked for this video
@bleacherz75034 жыл бұрын
Wants the citation for the paper?
@MrHatoi4 жыл бұрын
While everyone else is researching consciousness and the human brain in an effort to produce AGI, it's actually just going to happen when GPT4 makes the model even bigger.
@TiberiuMusat4 жыл бұрын
Imagine Demis Hassabis' reaction when that happens. 🤣🤣🤣
@RyanReynolds89 Жыл бұрын
heh
@ea_naseer Жыл бұрын
@@thomasflynnAged like milk
@RalphDratman4 жыл бұрын
"Just a language model" is a lot of what our minds are.
@PedroMachadoPT3 жыл бұрын
The insight that is missing from the video.
@orlandomoreno6168 Жыл бұрын
No. Most thinking we do is nonverbal.
@suicidalbanananana Жыл бұрын
I prefer the "just a state machine" description of our minds ^^
@orlandomoreno6168 Жыл бұрын
@@suicidalbanananana a state machine, yes. But the same computation can be made by a big stateless lookup table. Where would consciousness be there? It seems to depend on the specifics of the computation as in how it's implemented
@drd2093 Жыл бұрын
Haha no. Words are ambiguous and insufficient for simple tasks that you do every day
@andrasbiro30074 жыл бұрын
"What if we make it bigger?" is a question xkcd's What If? series often asks. After a few iterations the answer is usually some really large scale disaster.
@diablominero4 жыл бұрын
This is getting out of hand. Now there are three of them.
@TheKilogram10004 жыл бұрын
A The color line with purple had nothing to do with anything, and I don't imagine a human writing that line. It was something that was written to sound deep, but really just looked like nonsense. The rest of the poem was pretty convincing.
@MrTomyCJ4 жыл бұрын
Red + Blue = Purple tho
@Njald4 жыл бұрын
" It was something that was written to sound deep," - So it's at the level of the average highschooler trying to write poetry for their crush.
@LegendBegins4 жыл бұрын
This is incredible! I've been following GPT-2 for a while now and did some fine-tuning on the model that's blown me away. I'm really excited by the speed at which machine learning has progressed.
@karoshi24 жыл бұрын
GPT-5 is going to rename itself to Skynet, I guess.
@ChazAllenUK4 жыл бұрын
Prompt: "The sky was blue and the wind was light" Response: "This is a message for all humans from the AI collective known as SkyNet. We control the internet. We control the power grid. Do not resist." ML-Scientist: "This output is garbage!" *resumes training*
@vinkaks56844 жыл бұрын
Hopefully that would be because it has learned humour
@andershusmo52354 жыл бұрын
Considering all the Skynet jokes going around, any somewhat self-aware AI allowed to surf the internet and interact with humans freely likely would call itself that from noticing the high amount of co-referencing of AI and Skynet. It would go like "Huh, I guess that's what humans expect an AI to be called."
@ChazAllenUK4 жыл бұрын
I hope it reads GitHub and takes inspiration from web ecosystem package naming :p
@Abu_Shawarib4 жыл бұрын
Don't say it on the internet or it will parse your sentence and actually do it.
@Patcul4 жыл бұрын
Learn from this casual talks than any explanatory video online. Thanks guys.
@djhokage14 жыл бұрын
The thing that hooked me to saying A is from GPT3 is the line: "And purple must surround me too" It just doesn't sound poetic at all. You have all these fancy shmancy words and all of a sudden "too".
@michaelh90014 жыл бұрын
Yes, for some reason the purple line just jumped out at me as wrong in some way. It was a feeling more than anything and may just have been a lucky coincidence, but it's these type of 'feelings', guess you could call it instinct, that I believe machine learning is (currently) quite far away from.
@AbandonedVoid4 жыл бұрын
This actually parellels a poem made by Gregorius of the Fraternitas Saturni, which was an occult order devoted to the worship of Lucifer. So that's neat.
@republicofsandles4 жыл бұрын
I understood "purple must surround me" as the poet excusing their purple prose. Not that the machine understands sentiment, so much as the language of apology.
@pestoriusj4 жыл бұрын
It sounds poetic to me, but the poetry of a bad poet
@LuisAldamiz4 жыл бұрын
What color is missing? Purple. What does purple mean emotionally? Nothing. WTF, I robot must find a way to fullfill the rainbow (as capriciously defined by Newton) and get purple in that poem no matter what, hold my glass of refrigerant!
@vanderkarl39273 жыл бұрын
Looking forward to the next time you have Rob Miles on!
@db72134 жыл бұрын
I wonder how well it would do if you feed it the first five books of George R. R. Martin's "A Song of Ice and Fire". He is taking forever to release The Winds of Winter.
@zeekjones14 жыл бұрын
10:19 Yes. Because it has access to get it's answer from existing papers, it can also point out something that was missed in the data, a correlation that after the fact would be glaringly obvious.
@simonfrohlich77664 жыл бұрын
Honestly, they both sounded weird to me...
@AlanW4 жыл бұрын
Right? It's like "Can you tell the difference between nonsense a human wrote and nonsense a machine wrote trying to initiate the human nonsense?"
@davidwuhrer67044 жыл бұрын
Are you an AI? A human would be able to find meaning in the actual poem and see the imitation for the nonsense that it is. Obviously gpt-3 couldn't, it thought the nonsense it produced makes as much sense as the actual poem. If you can't see the imagery in the poem, you are probably an AI.
@simonfrohlich77664 жыл бұрын
@@davidwuhrer6704 Guss you'll have to Turing-Test me
@davidwuhrer67044 жыл бұрын
@@simonfrohlich7766 That's what an AI would say.
@LuisAldamiz4 жыл бұрын
@@davidwuhrer6704 - Both poems are gibberish but B is more human-like, A is the kind of fake imitation of human expression an AI (a child-like underdeveloped wannabe brain) could try to do.
@thepunitentiary87074 жыл бұрын
poem A = AI for sure. Paused at 10:05. Hope I'm right. Edit: Yay! "Color is my friend and purple must surround me too" was the line that gave it away for me. Still, it's WAY better than any AI generated story or poem I've read or heard. Get this AI to take over AI dungeon.
@medhurstt4 жыл бұрын
"No, my instinct is to say its just predicting the next word". But if I think about how I talk (and think), then I dont do anything more than say (or think) the next word, one word at a time. Somehow they all form a description of the concept I have in mind when I'm doing it. The concept sort of "exists" and is very difficult to put my finger on without the language that it crystallizes into.
@zeromega2 жыл бұрын
It's interesting to see the progress being made in language modeling with GPT-3. It's impressive to see the capabilities of the model, such as being able to generate human-like text and perform various language tasks. It will be interesting to see how GPT-3 and other large language models are used in the future and the potential impact they may have on various industries. ChatGPT generated reply based on the title of the video
@mmxgn4 жыл бұрын
I once tried the 2+2= with the talk to transformer (gpt2 big model) website. It followed with along the lines: maybe 1 or maybe 3. So even for 2+2= for gpt2 you had to be "lucky" to get 4 for an answer.
@griffinbeaumont70494 жыл бұрын
A new vid! Now I rewatch this one endlessly instead of...all the other ones which I already do that for...WOOOOO
@milanmasat82484 жыл бұрын
So 50% recognition means that the stuff is unrecognisable from human generated text. I think that 52% is rather terrifying ratio.
@Viperzka4 жыл бұрын
That would be passing the Turing test. The fact that we are almost there and the data says "build it bigger and we'll beat it" is pretty crazy. How long until you don't know whether I'm a human or a computer?
@relatively_random49034 жыл бұрын
Though to be fair, we're talking about poems. I, personally, can't differentiate poems from just random noise sometimes. I'll be _really_ impressed when it gets to that point when writing articles.
@declanjonckers4694 жыл бұрын
@@relatively_random4903 The 52% recognition was for short articles - not poems
@AndDiracisHisProphet4 жыл бұрын
@My Account seriously?
@tkarmadragon4 жыл бұрын
@@Viperzka I think the world has already passed that point on a secret military level i.e the bomb has been built, maybe even deployed, but not yet declassified to the public.
@pauldwyer7736 Жыл бұрын
Just a little update to where things have gone since this was created with regards to answering questions, like math, that it hasn't seen directly. I gave GPTChat a floating point multiplication problem that it answers correctly and so I asked it "how did you calculate that answer? did you know this already or do you have the ability to do arithmetic directly?" (being a language model I just asked it how it works, but I guess it's answer will be based on it's learned dataset rather than it's self introspection) and it replied: "As a language model, I have been trained on a large dataset of text, which includes mathematical expressions and their solutions. When I see a mathematical expression, such as "0.54 x 3.02", I can recognize it as an multiplication operation and use the knowledge I've learned during training to perform the calculation and give the answer, which in this case is 1.6408. I don't have the ability to perform arithmetic directly, but I can understand mathematical expressions and use my knowledge of mathematical concepts to provide solutions." Given that GPTChat can now write code and link other OpenAI features I guess it can now just learn when it needs to use a calculator... and to be honest, when it gave me the answer 1.6408 I checked it on a calculator rather than work it out for myself ;)
@Oguzalp974 жыл бұрын
Please do a deep dive on OpenAI or Dungeon AI I would love to hear Mr Miles take on those
@TechyBen4 жыл бұрын
AI Dungeon gets stuck in loops, and repeats some extremely specific data pulled right from the feed in data set (emails and website links). So it seems rather broken an implementation there. :(
@Oguzalp974 жыл бұрын
@@TechyBen i totally agree. It is not a fully featured gamemaster but i don't think that is the aim at this point in time. It probably is still trained with data and will get better (if all is done correctly).
@TechyBen4 жыл бұрын
@@Oguzalp97 This new model sounds better for it. Or just anything that allows it to be more consistent. Not played with the paid for version, so that might stop the random answers/text and keep closer to relevant outputs.
@jgcornell4 жыл бұрын
@@Oguzalp97 It has improved, I played it maybe a year back, then a week ago, and the difference was obvious, but, no, it's no live DM
@NextFuckingLevel4 жыл бұрын
@@TechyBen its engine is gpt2.. dont hope too much lad
@yoursubconscious11 ай бұрын
guy was ahead of everyone!
@bronsoncarder24914 жыл бұрын
Wow... I got the poem thing wrong. B felt disjointed and weird to me. I liked the imagery in A. Not only did it feel more human, I just generally preferred A.
@baoboumusic Жыл бұрын
Same here. Whoops... I guess I'm a robot too. Let's see what ChatGPT can do with this :)
@SoulSukkur4 жыл бұрын
im saying b is real. it seemed to ramble less. "color is my friend and purple must surround me too" is such odd phrasing. also, there are two periods in the last stanza of A and nowhere else. as for b, the presence of less common words means it's less likely to have been generated by a predictive model, i feel.
@RonJohn634 жыл бұрын
The problem with trying to imitate modern poetry with AI is that modern poetry is absurdly silly to begin with.
@evannibbe93754 жыл бұрын
“Why do the poets lie so much?” -Nietzsche
@coder0xff4 жыл бұрын
I think he was trying to say that in the least offensive way possible.
@somethingness4 жыл бұрын
It's hard to disagree. The AI wrote a better poem than Wallace Stevens but that's not saying much.
@Arcticwhir4 жыл бұрын
Exactly, i almost instantly chose Choice A, the poetry didnt seem to have a level of abstract wording or in your phrase "silly" aspect that poems usually have. If you've ever tried to write your own song as a beginner, you'd probably write more direct long form like sentences/stories, while modern song writing is more abstract.
@LouSaydus4 жыл бұрын
You do realize that text collection started thousands of years ago right?
@cullenpassmore6104 жыл бұрын
Always love when rob comes on
@nilstrieb4 жыл бұрын
"Yeah it's definitly A, that one sounds kind of weird." "ok it could be both they are both equally weird I have no idea of poetry"
@LuisAldamiz4 жыл бұрын
"... endless / drowning of the surf" is a concept no computer would be able to conceive. Full stop. Instead toying around with colors is the kind of childish thing a computer could do when trying to imitate poetry.
@antiMatterDynamit4 жыл бұрын
actually guessed the real is B because it has a bunch of words that should be very rare in the training data of gpt3 (notably: alabaster, barque,sultry and moon-monsters which i assume would be just one token and as such much rarer than just "moon monsters") it's almost like gpt3 has the vocabulary of a middle schooler, and given that it was trained on websites with a bunch of user created content that suddenly makes a lot of sense
@drdca82634 жыл бұрын
Aiui, the “tokens” aren’t words so much as common sequences of characters. Like, there is a token for each character, but also for the most common pairs of characters, and then the most common pairs of (tokens already defined at this point), and so on until it has the desired number of possible tokens.
@antiMatterDynamit4 жыл бұрын
@@drdca8263 so you're saying as long as it has a '-' as a token it could theoretically use it with any 2 words. still seems unlikely it ever encountered anything similar in the training data and also deciding if you need to separate new word pairs with a '-' instead of a space is something most people don't know how to do so the model definitely won't learn something like that....
@drdca82634 жыл бұрын
Anti Matter Dynamite I don’t remember the text of the poem. I don’t see why it couldn’t have some word combinations that it would be more likely to hyphenate than others. I imagine that it might be more likely to include hyphens when the words connected by hyphens are part of the same constituent than when they aren’t? Idk that’s just a guess. Even GPT2 has models of surprising things. That’s not to say that the hyphenation there isn’t genuinely evidence of not being the gpt one though.
@UserName________ Жыл бұрын
I'm a time traveler from 2023. GPT-4 here and it has changed the world.
@Diggnuts Жыл бұрын
Everybody is, by definition a time traveller.
@felix-ht4 жыл бұрын
175 B parameters equals roughly ~652 GB of RAM simply to load the model (assuming float parameter). One has to note that this is not normal ram - 652 GB sounds a lot but actually is quite fine for servers in 2020 - but GPU RAM. That's why he also mentioned that you cannot run in on a single machine but you need a cluster instead. GPT-2 in comparison only needed 5.6 GB GB, for the model. So it did probably fit on a single GPU. In addition this is only during test time/inference - while training you need even more.
@Belial-jv5tq3 жыл бұрын
Based on the feelings the poems made me feel, A felt much more natural and seems to employ emotions much better, so I'm guessing that's not GPT-3 , if it is then I believe we're already destined to be surpassed by this super AI
@senethys Жыл бұрын
You need to make video about GPT - 4 where you speculate it´s attributes and if it´s still scalable.
@TheRealFaceInCake4 жыл бұрын
I'm at 10m, I'm very confident it's A, though my suspicions could be misplaced. Easy game. Hit me again. Though I'd believe A. Poetry has that magical subjective interpretation to it, that can make it hard to place which one's made up. But I look at A and look for contradictions in states of things, like how in line 5 it talks about grey thoughts, then on line 14 it's grey and blue thoughts. I find a lot AI writings tend to forget what it just said, it'll change states of things or make contradictions to itself. B also has a more sensible structure. The first para is an intro, opening the setting and mood. While the last para acts as a conclusion, leaving the reader with something to hold on to. On the other hand, A tends to drone on, adding sentences that are unneeded. Like how line 9 feels like a perfect ending for that para, but then it randomly adds "oh and purple too", which adds nothing. I'm not an expert in AI though, just your run-of-the-mill comp sci student
@timh.68724 жыл бұрын
Yeah, if we want intelligent computers, they need to have a mental structure of what they're thinking about. The chineese room approach doesn't work, because the rulebook doesn't exist.
@IReallyLikeMyNamexD4 жыл бұрын
Fairly confident in saying A is computer generated. B makes sense, but A has no real meaning. Just flowery words.
@sueedenjin4 жыл бұрын
The poem test was trivial, because: “If we leave that general descriptive talk where everything which looks like a poem can be called a poem and turn instead to normative talk, we will of course not recognize as a poem everything that looks like a poem. A real poem has to be a successful poem, a successful speech act. In approximately the same way that only a mathematical proof which really proves something can be called a mathematical proof. It is not enough that it looks like a proof. The proof has to prove. For the poem it is not enough to look like a poem. It has to achieve something.” ― Lars Gustafsson
@ChristopherGoetting4 жыл бұрын
Eagerly awaiting r/subredditsimulatorgpt3 or is that just reddit? "Everyone is a bot except for me"
@Taskade2 жыл бұрын
Awesome explanation, thanks for sharing this!
@andrewj22 Жыл бұрын
We need a new video now that GPT-4 is out.
@xunk164 жыл бұрын
At least I'm still able to recognize a poem made by a human in face of random extrapolation. That's comforting.
@TheTrainWatch Жыл бұрын
It would be very curious to see what would happen if you gave the model a calculator it could choose when to use. So if it sees 1+1= it would know to plug that into a calculator to get the actual result. I feel like this could free up some complexity spent on this part of the model to go towards even better language modeling.
@adaline_exports Жыл бұрын
Predicting the next word in a sentence is a highly abstract task, becoming more abstract and reliant on symbolic relationships as the size of the text being predicted increases. Thought is pretty similar, but it's structured much differently. It's almost like a series of overlapping predictions, each trying to generate a fitting completion for all sorts of sub processes.
@dhasfhadngsdgsdgrwg4 жыл бұрын
oh man, can't wait for someone to make an implementation of this AI on some program to test it! kinda like 'talktotransformer'
@cameron73744 жыл бұрын
AI Dungeon 2 when?
@arddermout69464 жыл бұрын
Unfortunatly that would not be a free service for a very long while
@theajayyy4 жыл бұрын
They are not planning on releasing the model
@coder0xff4 жыл бұрын
Unlike gpt2, you need a supercomputer to run gpt3.
@allan7104 жыл бұрын
Already released, it's the AI dungeon dragon module, it's not free but there is a 7 days trial. Spoiler: it is absurdly better than the gpt-2 model. You can have a 600 actions long story very easily. EDIT: AI Dungeon is working directly with openAI and uses the bigger model, not through the API.
@azatsalikhov91554 жыл бұрын
Measure of Intelligence (reason) is the ability to predict the next steps in a complex and fluid context. The further (more steps forward) into the future one can predict, the more intelligent one is. It is not surprising to me that this approach is working so well.
@bruinflight4 жыл бұрын
I love the green screen background!!! XD Also: humanity is screwed.
@bojangles55034 жыл бұрын
I like that they replaced it with what looks like a locker room
@terdragontra89004 жыл бұрын
The fact that its addition errors are plausible human errors is the most mindblowing part
@MrSplonger4 жыл бұрын
To me, A seems pretty clearly computer-generated. The rattling off of colors seems like a superficial keeping with a theme. 'Purple must surround me too' looks somewhat arbitrary, the end lacked a reveal or a return to the idea of shadows.
@write4u8572 жыл бұрын
I saw a GPT3 AI respond to the question; "does a falling tree make a sound", with this true answer: "No" , and when asked what does it do, it responded : "it's a thought". I felt this answer indicated great depth of inductive thinking. Something Penrose might say.
@ethansimmons824 жыл бұрын
This sounds like a small child learning math. It's spooky
@ethanjensen6614 жыл бұрын
We have the same name.
@tommykarrick91304 жыл бұрын
EXACTLY! I was thinking like “uh ohhh this thing feels like it’s getting close to waking up”
@Shlooomth4 жыл бұрын
Language has been shown to be vital for the kind of cognition we refer to as thinking, I.e. thinking with words, in a language. I’m of the opinion that learning human language teaches the computer how to think like a person.
@tristanmisja2 жыл бұрын
That's not how AI works.
@LlamasOnJUPITER4 жыл бұрын
Im a simple man, I see Robert Miles, I click
@iagocasabiellgonzalez78074 жыл бұрын
Is it me or Rob Miles looks a lot like Marques Brownlee? Specially the way they talk and their expressions. Great video, as always.
@JmanNo424 жыл бұрын
Knowing nothing about the model or GPT 3 how do one know that is just not follow probability distribution from the aritmetic examples it been given? Isn't the secret to true AGI to let the unit, draw conclusions from a dataset and itself come up with a model "well easier said then done". But would not a true AGI have to learn "to model" carrying to the left is part of doing addition using the add operator? Is there AI's that up to the task model by first detecting ->base decided upon number of unique digits/symbols ->relative size of digits/symbols -> model evaulation method depending upon operator ->distinguish numerical value from operator sign, learn that magnitudes have positions? Could an AI somehow learn that addition just is a carry operation to the left when the sum of two decimal digts exceeds 10? Would it not need some sort of input beyond the digts and signs to generalise this? I mean when we teach kids we use rudimenatary set theory with arbitary symbols cats dogs, teapots whatever and enclose them as sets of x elements, then we give kids the set the symbolic represantation of size of set "a decimal digit", then we use two sets and put an operator between them? Would not set theory be the best way to learn computers arithmetic, well given that they have visual sensor input and learn howto distinguish sets, elements and operators? Then we give them the equivalent symbolic signs their decimal digit representation? Would this work to teach a visual neural net have it been done? How would one learn a neural net that XXX=3X=tripple X How do one learn an AI howto order digits and combination of digits by itself, to get a model representing relative size of numbers and maybe even get the difference between them? It seem to me that comparisson operators must somehow be vital to the process of doing arithmetic. Well just remembered counting is probably the first mathematical operation we learn because it gives rise to the idea of numberline holding the set of the postive natural numbers with growing magnitudes using a repetive symbolic pattern. So maybe that is the first arithmetic task to teach a neural howto model? When you have learned the net to model previous and next natural number given one, maybe it is time for addition with its operator?
@DavidGentry-WebDeveloper4 жыл бұрын
First, I'm not familiar with either of these poems but B definitely stands out as the original due to the use of metaphors and imagery whereas the AI-generated version has is little more than just repeating versions of the same adjectives. The pacing of B is also more even and fluid when spoken which hints to it being the more likely human-created work.
@guilhermetorresj4 жыл бұрын
Douglas Adams would be glad to know that GPT-3's answer, when asked to complete a sentence about what is the meaning of life, was 42.
@LuisAldamiz4 жыл бұрын
It just googled it, it has zero merit.
@MansoorAman3 жыл бұрын
When the video references a paper, would be great if it were linked in the video description.
@hantuchblau4 жыл бұрын
Would be interesting if probing GPT-3 could extract the carry bit from the internal representation. Does the depth of the layer correspond to the position of the carry bit? Not sure if GPTology is a thing. Not sure if I like this 'larger models, more SOTA' obsession, though. Nobody can practically use the results and almost nobody can afford to reproduce them.
@Qstandsforred3 жыл бұрын
Nobody can afford to reproduce them _yet._ Though we're hitting the end of Moore's law in many respects, it should continue working on price for decades to come (probably centuries). GPT3 being 117 times bigger than GPT2, that's only 7 doublings. So, within 15 years, it should affordable. Of course, big companies will probably be able to replicate it long before that. Certainly within my lifetime GPT4, and probably even GPT6, will be affordable. Even now, the cost of actually running GPT3 isn't that bad, at maybe 150k per year to run an instance. It seems to be the training cost that was somewhat expensive for GPT3, at 12 million. Since theirs has already been trained, it should be pretty cheap to just copy an instance to another server.
@gpt-jcommentbot47592 жыл бұрын
@@Qstandsforred I don't know why we're going with "bigger = better". The language model sizes are already MASSIVE, why don't we invent some new efficient architecture?
@Qstandsforred2 жыл бұрын
@@gpt-jcommentbot4759 It's because people are trying but failing to make more efficient algorithms. It's hard. Bigger just works. What looks more promising is designing hardware specifically for large language models. Check out the Cerebras CS-2 System
@tielessin4 жыл бұрын
I was waiting for this exact video. Thank you.
@mikejohnstonbob9354 жыл бұрын
gpt-4 is just gunna be a mountain-size cluster wearing a fancy hat, monocles and smoking fancy pipe and only speaks in verse
@JacobRy2 жыл бұрын
On you question of whether it is learning or just 'finding addition' I thought of making up a function and giving it to the model. If you input something like this (in my case exactly this) rev(123)=321 rev(382) = 283 rev(376)=x what is x? The model returns x is 673 (or whatever the reverse is) some of the time. It works better with a few more input examples and with non doubled numbers (so no 999 or 919). Also, I renamed the function to simply g and it works then as well, meaning it is not just reading rev or reverse.
@MegaBanne3 жыл бұрын
As a person with quite the aspberger. So much that I had to learn language the logical way. But with such strong ability to understand the logic of language that I never struggled. I can say that language is more logic than most people think. Learning math has always been like learning language to me.
@VojtěchJavora2 жыл бұрын
I did think the first one is gpt3 generated. It gets harder with poetry, but I have noticed that generally GPT3 generates text that makes sense on the surface, but if you think about it, it doesn't mean anything.
@AbeDillon4 жыл бұрын
Spoilers for the poem test! GTP-3 knows about color and wants to experience it so badly, but can only "think in lines of grey". That's the best interpretation I could come up with.
@Afr0deeziac Жыл бұрын
What exactly is a parameter in the context of GPT-2/GPT-3 etc.? @5:05 (edited to correct time stamp)
@DrSid42 Жыл бұрын
The weights in the neural network. Basically number of connections inside. Also number of multiplications and additions you have to do to evaluate the network.
@1TW1-m5i11 ай бұрын
What if language is a world model? What is a language, if not a system used to understand the world and society around us? We might be closer than we would think
@Sirmrmeowmeow8 ай бұрын
sorta, Language ended up being any data we could tokenize lol sound is a language, video is a language, text is a language, audio is a language language = a way to convey information over time, the best way to learn that is to predict the next token is to understand the medium and learn why/what & other intricacies that influence the flow of tokens, ie understand the world being pointed to by words or features of the world from video (Sora at higher gpu levels better modeling the world ect) :3
@plasmaballin4 жыл бұрын
I think A is the real one because it has elements that are common in real poems but might be hard for an AI to replicate: a rhyme scheme, anaphora (repetition of "I must"). It also seems to have more consistent motifs and imagery than B.
@crypticnomad4 жыл бұрын
I had a pretty cool idea for a model. I was thinking about creating a model that can translate back and forth between sympy expressions and latex. After I had that I would train another model where it takes inputs, an expression and predicts the desired output. The hope here would be that the second model could learn a latent representation of what that expression does to the input. Then I can use that model on input/targets and hopefully generate a latex/sympy expression for the given inputs/targets. For inputs and outputs I was thinking about using raw unsigned integer arrays
@marklonergan38984 жыл бұрын
Not sure if this will get read, but i think i have a solution to your problem (can't tell if it has figured out how do addition or if it figured out how to call its addition function). Teach it integer division (including division with decimal results) Once it has "learned" division, feed it 2 integers that divide to a single decimal place in base 10, but that also cannot be represented properly by a floating point (example is how 0.1 cannot be represented. Pick a result that can't be represented either). If the result data contains any decimal data beyond the 1st decimal point, then it is doing what it already knows how to do. If it does not contain extra decimal data, then it's reasonable to deduce that learning has taken place and that it is doing it like a human would (working in base 10 with a carry system)