RE: https://social.treehouse.systems/@ariadne/116213132813239860

Read what Ariadne is writing about LLMs. This all tracks with my intuition, that OpenAI et al are a big grift.

You categorically do NOT need millions or billions to train a useful LLM that can communicate in human language. LLMs are good at language, it's in the name!

The reason these companies are burning massive amounts of money and using increasingly massive models is they've taken "look, this tech makes for a cute chatbot that can do useful stuff" and turned it into "if we make it bigger it'll be SMARTER!"

And the thing is, that's true... to a point. When you stop treating the LLM as a language model and start trying to turn them into an all-knowing entity that has memorized the entirety of human knowledge and can do anything you prompt it for all with the same model (or a few collaborating models), you quickly hit diminishing returns. And you end up with a thing that's kind of smart (not really) and kind of knows everything (not really) and convinces everyone to throw insane amounts of money at you because you're fundamentally using the technology for something it wasn't intended for.

The way we fight back is with small home-grown "LLMs" (SLMs?) that run on a MacBook and train on a few GPUs and training/fine tuning them for specific purposes.

The whole AIBro approach of just using prompting and in-context learning with a single all-powerful model is just patently absurd.

@lina there's also a question of ethics regarding the potential for actual sentience, see Kent Overstreet's thesis on generalized language comprehension being equal to (emotional) interior life
@Profpatsch To put it mildly, I completely disagree with his take on this.
@lina I would love to disagree with him, but unfortunately I can’t

@Profpatsch Monolingual, I take it?

Any bilingual person can tell you language has nothing to do with sentience. My thought processes are not based on any particular language.

@lina @Profpatsch Honestly, you could just get the same result from observing humans with learning disabilities that prevent language acquisition.

They're still clearly sapient.