• DessertStorms
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    1 month ago

    But the AI isn’t “recalling” in the same way you do, it doesn’t “remember” what it “read”, it “reads” on demand and has instant access to essentially all of the information available online it was trained on (E: though it’s becoming more or less the same thing, and is definitely the same when it comes to law books for example), from which it collects the necessary details if and when it needs it.

    So yes, it is literally “sat” there with all the books open in front of it, and the ability to pinpoint a bit of information in any one of all the books in milliseconds.

    • @Deceptichum@sh.itjust.works
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      1 month ago

      It doesn’t read on demand, it reads once when it’s being trained, and it later recalls what it learnt from that training.

      Training LLMs takes a very long time and a lot of hardware power.

        • @8uurg@lemmy.world
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          51 month ago

          These models have so many parameters that, while insufficient to memorize all text it has ever seen, it can end up memorizing some of the content. It is the difference between being able to recall a random passage versus recalling the exact thing you need. Both allow you to spill content verbatim, but one is problematic while the other can be helpful.

          There are techniques to allow it it ‘read on demand’, but they are not part of the core model (i.e. the autocmpletion model / LLM) and are tacked on top of it. For example, you can tie it search engine, which Microsoft’s copilot does, and is something which I don’t think is enabled for ChatGPT by default. Or allow it to query a external data bank (Retrieval Augmented Generation).

      • DessertStorms
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        1 month ago

        It doesn’t read on demand

        Yes, it does, from the information it was trained on (or - stored), which like you say, requires a lot of hardware power so it can be accessed on demand. It isn’t just manifesting the information out of thin air, and it definitely doesn’t “remember” in the same way we do (E: even the best photographic memory isn’t the same as an indexable one).

        • @abruptly8951@lemmy.world
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          61 month ago

          It’s definitely not indexed, we use RAG architectures to add indexing to data stores that we want the model to have direct access to, the relevant information is injected directly in the context (prompt). This can somewhat be equated to short term memory

          The rest of the information is approximated in the weights of the neural network which gives the model general knowledge and intuition…akin to long term memory

          • @selfA
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            151 month ago

            or it can be equated to a shitty database and lossy compression (with artifacts in the form of “hallucinations”), but that doesn’t make the tech sound particularly smart, does it?

            but half the posts in your history are in this thread and that’s too many already

            • @selfA
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              131 month ago

              oh do fuck off

              • @froztbyte
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                111 month ago

                awww, I just got another bowl of popcorn!

                but rofl holy shit at “glad to see someone else knows how they work” given the … depth of understanding, shall we say? that was demonstrated in this thread