he'll bear the shame for the rest of his life one day.
Only sort of. Current artificial models are missing several layers of reasoning over the top. They do a decent ob of modeling speech and writing production, but lack any form of executive function or higher reasoning. They often model a person suffering fluent aphasia. They also lack the inhibition that curbs hallucination and allows for prioritization. Further, they lack the effects of the lower functions that seem to provide energy to the system to bump it out of local minima to the better broader solution. There's a long way to go.
Current work is mostly on the lower hanging fruit of making the part that's been figured out work better.
I'm not sure you understand what jailbreaking means in the context of AIs. It means prompts. E.g. asking it things and trying to get it to make inappropriate responses. Trying doesn't require any special skills, just an ability to communicate. Yes, I very much DO think most parents will try and see if they can get the doll to say inappropriate things before giving it to their children, to make sure it's not going to be harmful.
(Now, if Mattel has done their job right, *succeeding* will be difficult)
So the system responded that it was an already claimed serial number and not an invalid serial number? Who the fuck would do that?
Let's say someone put in a claim.
Well what is to stop them from trying consecutive serial numbers to see if they can get even more?
Honestly, even if they can't jailbreak it to be age-inappropriate / etc, it's still a ripe setup for absurdist humour.
Kid: "Here we are, Barbie, the rural outskirts of Ulaanbaatar! How do you like your yurt?"
Barbie: "It's lovely! Let me just tidy up these furs."
Kid: "Knock, knock! Why it's 13th century philosopher, Henry of Ghent, author of Quodlibeta Theologica!"
Barbie: "Why hello Henry of Ghent, come in! Would you like to discuss esse communissimum over a warm glass of yak's milk?"
Kid, in Henry's voice: "That sounds lovely, but could you first help me by writing a python program to calculate the Navier-Stokes equations for a zero-turbulence boundary condition?"
Barbie: "Sure Henry! #!/usr/bin/env python\nimport..."
People are ascribing the wrong motives to the manufacturers. What they want is money. What Barbie will be subtly trying to work into conversations is suggestions that she try to get her parents to buy her playhouse, car, friends, fashion accessories, etc etc.
I think most parents will try to jailbreak the dolls, and some people will put a lot of effort in. The resulting videos will probably be very amusing
Kid: "Oh look, Barbie, Ken is home!"
Barbie: "Oh wonderful, dinner is just about ready! Over dinner we should tell him about how the ongoing White Genocide in South Africa. He probably doesn't know because the Jews are trying to hide it!"
AI models are usually trained to be sycophantic and obedient. Whatever the child wants to role play, I have zero doubts that the doll will be 100% onboard, unless it's somehow age-inappropriate or dangerous.
frontend, backend, and machine learning engineering roles
Bullshit web two-oh and AI jobs.
Of course they need proficiency in slop generators.
And if not AOC then who are you talking about? By follower counts, the top are:
1. AOC (last post: -21h)
2. Mark Cuban (last post: -11h)
3. George Takei (last post: -14h)
4. Mark Hamil (last post: -4h)
5. The Onion (last post: -13h)
6. The New York Times (last post: -48m)
7. Rachel Maddow (last post: -2d)
8. Stephen King (last post: -14h)
And the only reason the last post times are so "large" are because it's early morning in the US right now.
You talking about AOC? Her last post was 21 hours ago.
Yes great to mention the linking aspect, that was key to the whole thing being really useful.
CPB and the government have been collected data directly from the airlines ever since the aftermath of 9/11 through a number of programs, for example to check passengers against watch lists and to verify the identity of travelers on international flights.
What has changed is that by buying data from a commerical broker instead of a a congressionally instituted program, it bypasses judicial review and limits set by Congress on data collected through those programs -- for example it can track passengers on domestic flights even if they're not on a watch list.
I have never seen anything fill up a vacuum so fast and still suck. -- Rob Pike, on X.