<p>I'm so confused. I just found a small body of literature applying LLMs to reinforcement learning type tasks, exploring the use of LLMs for "autonomous decision making."</p><p>I guess people are building more LLM agent systems, and we ought to understand them and what makes them better / worse at what they do.</p><p>But I still feel like LLMs are fundamentally not suited to decision making tasks. They don't weigh options and decide. At best, you could say they interpolate what a reasonable choice might look like based on the examples of people making choices in their training data.</p><p>That's... really not the same thing! Like, not at all. It's impressive that this sometimes works, but this seems very silly to me when we could be using actual RL systems that really are making informed decisions from experience, with mathematical rigor to estimate the quality of those choices.</p><p><a href="/tags/ai/" rel="tag">#ai</a> <a href="/tags/llm/" rel="tag">#llm</a> <a href="/tags/rl/" rel="tag">#rl</a></p>
llm
Something notable about this case is that Google essentially argued that everyone knows Google's AI overviews are untrustworthy, and it's on them if they believe any of it. Coupled with Microsoft's assertion that Microsoft Copilot is for entertainment purposes only, one really has to wonder how seriously the companies pushing AI take their own technology.<br><br>From the linked article: "The Oumi analysis also found that 56 percent of the correct Gemini 3 answers couldn't be backed up by the sources Google linked. The AI is giving answers whose origins users can't trace." This technology is not fit for purpose.<br><br>Frankly, given how much is at stake, I find it unacceptable that multi-trillion-dollar corporations are playing word games with the legal system. They should release their products on Steam and XBOX if they're for entertainment only and get them out of search engines and office suites, tools people use to do real work every day.<br><br>Landmark German ruling declares Google's AI Overviews are Google's own words and makes it liable for false answers: <a href="https://the-decoder.com/landmark-german-ruling-declares-googles-ai-overviews-are-googles-own-words-and-makes-it-liable-for-false-answers/" rel="nofollow" class="ellipsis" title="the-decoder.com/landmark-german-ruling-declares-googles-ai-overviews-are-googles-own-words-and-makes-it-liable-for-false-answers/"><span class="invisible">https://</span><span class="ellipsis">the-decoder.com/landmark-germa</span><span class="invisible">n-ruling-declares-googles-ai-overviews-are-googles-own-words-and-makes-it-liable-for-false-answers/</span></a><br><br><a href="/tags/ai/" rel="tag">#AI</a> <a href="/tags/genai/" rel="tag">#GenAI</a> <a href="/tags/generativeai/" rel="tag">#GenerativeAI</a> <a href="/tags/llm/" rel="tag">#LLM</a> <a href="/tags/google/" rel="tag">#Google</a> <a href="/tags/googlegemini/" rel="tag">#GoogleGemini</a> <a href="/tags/gemini/" rel="tag">#Gemini</a> <a href="/tags/aioverviews/" rel="tag">#AIOverviews</a><br>
<p>To Gen or Not To Gen: The Ethical Use of Generative AI - My Not So Private Tech Life <br><a href="https://blog.johanneslink.net/2025/11/04/to-gen-or-not-to-gen/" rel="nofollow" class="ellipsis" title="blog.johanneslink.net/2025/11/04/to-gen-or-not-to-gen/"><span class="invisible">https://</span><span class="ellipsis">blog.johanneslink.net/2025/11/</span><span class="invisible">04/to-gen-or-not-to-gen/</span></a> <br>by <span class="h-card"><a href="https://det.social/@jlink" class="u-url mention" rel="nofollow noopener noreferrer" target="_blank">@<span>jlink</span></a></span> </p><p>Highly recommended read... please take the time.</p><p><a href="/tags/ai/" rel="tag">#AI</a> <a href="/tags/genai/" rel="tag">#GenAI</a> <a href="/tags/llm/" rel="tag">#LLM</a> <a href="/tags/ml/" rel="tag">#ML</a> <a href="/tags/ethics/" rel="tag">#Ethics</a></p>
<p>All Modern Digital Infrastructure</p><p><a href="/tags/ai/" rel="tag">#AI</a> <a href="/tags/llm/" rel="tag">#LLM</a> <a href="/tags/llms/" rel="tag">#LLMs</a> <a href="/tags/foss/" rel="tag">#FOSS</a></p>
<p>〈Over 60% of Asia-Pacific enterprises plan to increase sovereign AI spending〉 </p><p><a href="https://www.bworldonline.com/technology/2026/03/05/734185/over-60-of-asia-pacific-enterprises-plan-to-increase-sovereign-ai-spending/" rel="nofollow" class="ellipsis" title="www.bworldonline.com/technology/2026/03/05/734185/over-60-of-asia-pacific-enterprises-plan-to-increase-sovereign-ai-spending/"><span class="invisible">https://</span><span class="ellipsis">www.bworldonline.com/technolog</span><span class="invisible">y/2026/03/05/734185/over-60-of-asia-pacific-enterprises-plan-to-increase-sovereign-ai-spending/</span></a></p><p><a href="/tags/sovereignai/" rel="tag">#SovereignAI</a> <a href="/tags/ai/" rel="tag">#AI</a> <a href="/tags/llm/" rel="tag">#LLM</a> <a href="/tags/asiapacific/" rel="tag">#AsiaPacific</a></p>
<p>I have like zero respect left for developers who use LLMs to write or maintain their software.</p><p>I don't even care for the reasons why they use this unethical piece of... technology.</p><p>Technology trained on data they don't own. Technology owned and shaped by fascists. Technology that sends its crawlers around the globe to suck every bit they can find to dump their models into big f***ing corp data centers. Data centers that are polluting the air with their big ass gas plants. </p><p>But hey! "Leave ethics aside". "That's how software development works today!".</p><p>I'm so sick of this and about everyone supporting this industry.</p><p>If you feel targeted, you are welcome. I have zero respect for you or your software garbage. I just wish you the worst.</p><p><a href="/tags/ai/" rel="tag">#AI</a> <a href="/tags/llm/" rel="tag">#LLM</a> <a href="/tags/floss/" rel="tag">#FLOSS</a> <a href="/tags/linux/" rel="tag">#Linux</a> <a href="/tags/vim/" rel="tag">#vim</a> <a href="/tags/gohugo/" rel="tag">#gohugo</a> <a href="/tags/foss/" rel="tag">#FOSS</a> <a href="/tags/fckai/" rel="tag">#FckAI</a></p>
Something I've learned from Ruth Ben-Ghiat: aspiring authoritarians purposely engineer situations in which people are invited to give up their values and morals and make decisions that compromise their sense of right and wrong. Moral decay, moral injury, and subsequently moral collapse become so intolerable that afflicted people will blame anything else but their own choices or the leader they threw in with, which of course are the only proximate causes it would be helpful to implicate. The more compromising decisions they make, the more they are drawn into the authoritarian's orbit.<br><br>There is no question that it is indefensible to use generative AI systems as they are currently constituted, especially the commercial ones, once one becomes aware of how they are made and operated and the destructive consequences they have already had and will surely continue to have. Among the many reasons using these tools is indefensible is that they represent an authoritarian invitation. You're invited to trade your morals and ethics for a bit of convenience, a reduction in friction, a learning experience, a rhetorical flourish, or maybe (a kind of) status. You thereby align yourself more and more with people who say things like "water is fake" or "fuck earth" as they make the computer systems enabling the horrors we're watching unfold on social media. You start to tell yourself stories, complexifying stories that explain why it's OK you did this thing that you know is not OK. You move in the direction of people who are already telling themselves stories like this. Maybe their stories have superior analgesic qualities to yours.<br><br>Nobody needs to go down this path.<br><br><a href="/tags/ai/" rel="tag">#AI</a> <a href="/tags/genai/" rel="tag">#GenAI</a> <a href="/tags/generativeai/" rel="tag">#GenerativeAI</a> <a href="/tags/llm/" rel="tag">#LLM</a> <a href="/tags/ethics/" rel="tag">#ethics</a> <a href="/tags/morality/" rel="tag">#morality</a> <a href="/tags/authoritarianism/" rel="tag">#authoritarianism</a><br>
<p>A lab mate shared this write up of Don Knuth using LLMs to solve a math problem: <a href="https://www-cs-faculty.stanford.edu/~knuth/papers/claude-cycles.pdf" rel="nofollow" class="ellipsis" title="www-cs-faculty.stanford.edu/~knuth/papers/claude-cycles.pdf"><span class="invisible">https://</span><span class="ellipsis">www-cs-faculty.stanford.edu/~k</span><span class="invisible">nuth/papers/claude-cycles.pdf</span></a></p><p>It's clear that using Claude did help them arrive at some new understanding here, which is wonderful. I'm happy for them.</p><p>However, I'm upset by how much they personify Claude and attribute the solution to "him."</p><p>From this narrative, it's clear that the humans were very actively involved from beginning to end. Claude was a helpful tool, but it did not solve this problem on its own. What role did it actually play? How was it like or unlike a human collaborator on this problem?</p><p>It did generate a crucial insight, but where did that come from? Was it plagiarized from some unknown source? Did it "just emerge" from text completion and interpolation in latent space? Do we need some other explanation for Claude's apparent creativity?</p><p>These folks don't care. They just wanted a solution, which they attribute to Claude, and leave it at that. I think that's a serious problem.</p><p><a href="/tags/llm/" rel="tag">#llm</a> <a href="/tags/ai/" rel="tag">#ai</a> <a href="/tags/science/" rel="tag">#science</a> <a href="/tags/math/" rel="tag">#math</a></p>
<p>An open letter to <a href="/tags/grammarly/" rel="tag">#Grammarly</a> and other plagiarists, thieves and slop merchants<br>by Maureen Ryan</p><p>> You do not get to say that you don’t understand these very basic issues of autonomy, respect and self-control. You. Do. Not.</p><p><a href="/tags/maureenryan/" rel="tag">#MaureenRyan</a> <a href="/tags/ai/" rel="tag">#AI</a> <a href="/tags/slop/" rel="tag">#Slop</a> <a href="/tags/llm/" rel="tag">#LLM</a> <br><a href="/tags/identitytheft/" rel="tag">#IdentityTheft</a> <br><a href="https://www.moryan.com/an-open-letter-to-grammarly-and-other-plagiarists-thieves-and-slop-merchants/" rel="nofollow" class="ellipsis" title="www.moryan.com/an-open-letter-to-grammarly-and-other-plagiarists-thieves-and-slop-merchants/"><span class="invisible">https://</span><span class="ellipsis">www.moryan.com/an-open-letter-</span><span class="invisible">to-grammarly-and-other-plagiarists-thieves-and-slop-merchants/</span></a></p>
<p>Your <a href="/tags/llm/" rel="tag">#LLM</a> Doesn't Write Correct Code. It Writes Plausible Code.</p><p>Deployment is an act of faith, not engineering.<br> <br>[…] THIS is the failure mode. Not broken syntax or missing semicolons. The code is syntactically and semantically correct. It does what was asked for. It just does not do what the situation requires. In the SQLite case, the intent was “implement a query planner” and the result is a query planner that plans every query as a full table scan. In the disk daemon case, the intent was “manage disk space intelligently” and the result is 82,000 lines of intelligence applied to a problem that needs none. Both projects fulfill the prompt. Neither solves the problem.<br><a href="https://blog.katanaquant.com/p/your-llm-doesnt-write-correct-code" rel="nofollow" class="ellipsis" title="blog.katanaquant.com/p/your-llm-doesnt-write-correct-code"><span class="invisible">https://</span><span class="ellipsis">blog.katanaquant.com/p/your-ll</span><span class="invisible">m-doesnt-write-correct-code</span></a></p><p><a href="/tags/aihype/" rel="tag">#aihype</a> <a href="/tags/theaicon/" rel="tag">#theaicon</a></p>
<p>Boost plz!</p><p>Looking for critical scholarship on the use of "AI" by library/archive workers. University libraries in particular, but adjacent and tangentially-relevant-at-best stuff is welcome too. Any format is fine: books, papers, blogposts, whatever. If it's good, gimme all you've got!</p><p>Looks like we're gonna have a department-wide conversation about people using LLMs, and it's being framed as "we're all using it, but we're not talking about it, so let's make sure we're all on the same page about using it responsibly" ... I'll of course be pushing the "there's basically no way to use it responsibly" position, and I'd like to arm myself and others with some critical analyses of issues related to its use in library/archive spaces.</p><p><a href="/tags/llm/" rel="tag">#llm</a> <a href="/tags/llms/" rel="tag">#LLMs</a> <a href="/tags/ai/" rel="tag">#ai</a> <a href="/tags/libraries/" rel="tag">#libraries</a> <a href="/tags/archives/" rel="tag">#archives</a></p>
Edited 88d ago
<p>The whole LLM as a service business model has a fundamental flaw to it. The cost of operating the data centres is an order of magnitude higher than the profit.</p><p>But if models get efficient enough to bring the costs down, then they become efficient enough to run locally. So, either it’s too expensive to operate, or nobody will want to use it as a service because running your own gives you privacy and flexibility.</p><p>The fact that investors don't get this is frankly incredible.</p><p><a href="/tags/llm/" rel="tag">#llm</a> <a href="/tags/economy/" rel="tag">#economy</a></p>
<p>I had to get this idea out of my head. <a href="/tags/theylive/" rel="tag">#TheyLive</a> <a href="/tags/llm/" rel="tag">#LLM</a></p>
<p>一些 <a href="/tags/阴谋论/" rel="tag">#阴谋论</a> 在中文互联网上流传,认为一些失踪人口的意识被上传,以用于开发豆包等大语言模型。</p><p><a href="https://www.zhihu.com/question/2022623696783774161" rel="nofollow" class="ellipsis" title="www.zhihu.com/question/2022623696783774161"><span class="invisible">https://</span><span class="ellipsis">www.zhihu.com/question/2022623</span><span class="invisible">696783774161</span></a><br><a href="https://xcancel.com/YesterdayOrange/status/2038891964415037591" rel="nofollow" class="ellipsis" title="xcancel.com/YesterdayOrange/status/2038891964415037591"><span class="invisible">https://</span><span class="ellipsis">xcancel.com/YesterdayOrange/st</span><span class="invisible">atus/2038891964415037591</span></a></p><p><a href="/tags/conspiracy/" rel="tag">#conspiracy</a> <a href="/tags/internetmysteries/" rel="tag">#internetmysteries</a> <a href="/tags/missingperson/" rel="tag">#missingperson</a> <a href="/tags/ai/" rel="tag">#AI</a> <a href="/tags/互联网谜团/" rel="tag">#互联网谜团</a> <a href="/tags/失踪人口/" rel="tag">#失踪人口</a> <a href="/tags/人工智能/" rel="tag">#人工智能</a> <a href="/tags/大语言模型/" rel="tag">#大语言模型</a> <a href="/tags/llm/" rel="tag">#llm</a> <a href="/tags/llms/" rel="tag">#llms</a></p>
Edited 81d ago
<p>DAIR is a research institute that is highly sceptical about AI hype and the big tech companies behind it. You can follow their excellent video account at:</p><p>➡️ <span class="h-card"><a href="https://peertube.dair-institute.org/accounts/dair" class="u-url mention" rel="nofollow noopener noreferrer" target="_blank">@<span>dair</span></a></span> </p><p>They've already published over 100 videos. If these haven't federated to your server yet, you can browse them all at <a href="https://peertube.dair-institute.org/a/dair/videos" rel="nofollow" class="ellipsis" title="peertube.dair-institute.org/a/dair/videos"><span class="invisible">https://</span><span class="ellipsis">peertube.dair-institute.org/a/</span><span class="invisible">dair/videos</span></a></p><p>You can also follow their Mastodon account at <span class="h-card"><a href="https://dair-community.social/@DAIR" class="u-url mention" rel="nofollow noopener noreferrer" target="_blank">@<span>[email protected]</span></a></span> </p><p><a href="/tags/featuredpeertube/" rel="tag">#FeaturedPeerTube</a> <a href="/tags/ai/" rel="tag">#AI</a> <a href="/tags/llm/" rel="tag">#LLM</a> <a href="/tags/llms/" rel="tag">#LLMs</a> <a href="/tags/artificialintelligence/" rel="tag">#ArtificialIntelligence</a> <a href="/tags/peertube/" rel="tag">#PeerTube</a></p>
<p>RE: <a href="https://mastodon.online/@parismarx/116372697459719963" rel="nofollow" class="ellipsis" title="mastodon.online/@parismarx/116372697459719963"><span class="invisible">https://</span><span class="ellipsis">mastodon.online/@parismarx/116</span><span class="invisible">372697459719963</span></a></p><p>One of the worst things about this is that Big Tech corporations like Google, Meta, Anthropic and OpenAI have become so disproportionally wealthy and powerful that they can unleash this shit show upon the world without being held accountable… 😖</p><p><a href="/tags/tech/" rel="tag">#tech</a> <a href="/tags/technology/" rel="tag">#technology</a> <a href="/tags/bigtech/" rel="tag">#BigTech</a> <a href="/tags/it/" rel="tag">#IT</a> <a href="/tags/ai/" rel="tag">#AI</a> <a href="/tags/artificialintelligence/" rel="tag">#ArtificialIntelligence</a> <a href="/tags/llm/" rel="tag">#LLM</a> <a href="/tags/llms/" rel="tag">#LLMs</a> <a href="/tags/ml/" rel="tag">#ML</a> <a href="/tags/machinelearning/" rel="tag">#MachineLearning</a> <a href="/tags/genai/" rel="tag">#GenAI</a> <a href="/tags/generativeai/" rel="tag">#generativeAI</a> <a href="/tags/aiagent/" rel="tag">#AIAgent</a> <a href="/tags/aislop/" rel="tag">#AISlop</a> <a href="/tags/fuckai/" rel="tag">#FuckAI</a> <a href="/tags/fuck_ai/" rel="tag">#Fuck_AI</a> <a href="/tags/enshittification/" rel="tag">#enshittification</a> <a href="/tags/google/" rel="tag">#google</a> <a href="/tags/gemini/" rel="tag">#gemini</a></p>
Edited 73d ago
<p>I thought this was a particularly good analysis of the problem of using LLMs for science. It explores the purpose of science, the perverse incentives that drive people to use LLMs, and the impact this has on skill building and training future scientists.</p><p>My lab group has been struggling with this topic lately, without much consensus. This blog post captures a lot of our thinking, and very clearly made some good points that we appreciated. It mostly just describes the mess we're in without offering much useful advice, but just laying out the problems do nicely is helpful. That said, I do worry the author may be underestimating the impact these tools might have on experienced researchers.</p><p><a href="https://ergosphere.blog/posts/the-machines-are-fine/" rel="nofollow" class="ellipsis" title="ergosphere.blog/posts/the-machines-are-fine/"><span class="invisible">https://</span><span class="ellipsis">ergosphere.blog/posts/the-mach</span><span class="invisible">ines-are-fine/</span></a><br><a href="/tags/academicchatter/" rel="tag">#academicchatter</a> <a href="/tags/llm/" rel="tag">#llm</a></p>
<p>Why <a href="/tags/discourse/" rel="tag">#Discourse</a> is NOT going closed-source in an age of <a href="/tags/ai/" rel="tag">#AI</a> <a href="/tags/llm/" rel="tag">#LLM</a> ..</p><p><a href="https://blog.discourse.org/2026/04/discourse-is-not-going-closed-source/" rel="nofollow" class="ellipsis" title="blog.discourse.org/2026/04/discourse-is-not-going-closed-source/"><span class="invisible">https://</span><span class="ellipsis">blog.discourse.org/2026/04/dis</span><span class="invisible">course-is-not-going-closed-source/</span></a></p><p><a href="/tags/sx/" rel="tag">#SX</a> <a href="/tags/socialcoding/" rel="tag">#SocialCoding</a> <a href="/tags/soss/" rel="tag">#SOSS</a> <a href="/tags/foss/" rel="tag">#FOSS</a></p>
<p>👀 … <a href="https://sfconservancy.org/blog/2026/apr/15/eternal-november-generative-ai-llm/" rel="nofollow" class="ellipsis" title="sfconservancy.org/blog/2026/apr/15/eternal-november-generative-ai-llm/"><span class="invisible">https://</span><span class="ellipsis">sfconservancy.org/blog/2026/ap</span><span class="invisible">r/15/eternal-november-generative-ai-llm/</span></a> …my colleague Denver Gingerich writes: newcomers' extensive reliance on LLM-backed generative AI is comparable to the Eternal September onslaught to USENET in 1993. I was on USENET extensively then; I confirm the disruption was indeed similar. I urge you to read his essay, think about it, & join Denver, me, & others at the following datetimes…<br> $ date -d '2026-04-21 15:00 UTC'<br> $ date -d '2026-04-28 23:00 UTC'<br>…in <a href="https://bbb-new.sfconservancy.org/rooms/welcome-llm-gen-ai-users-to-foss/join" rel="nofollow" class="ellipsis" title="bbb-new.sfconservancy.org/rooms/welcome-llm-gen-ai-users-to-foss/join"><span class="invisible">https://</span><span class="ellipsis">bbb-new.sfconservancy.org/room</span><span class="invisible">s/welcome-llm-gen-ai-users-to-foss/join</span></a><br><a href="/tags/ai/" rel="tag">#AI</a> <a href="/tags/llm/" rel="tag">#LLM</a> <a href="/tags/opensource/" rel="tag">#OpenSource</a></p>
Edited 67d ago
<p>保护未成年人不能建立在头痛医头,脚痛医脚的基础上,如果你的治疗方案根本就医不好头和脚就更不应该了。我毫不怀疑这么做不可能解决问题,只能进一步加重问题,然后他们为了解决问题继续采取这种头痛医头,脚痛医脚的方法。</p><p>实际上我对最近有人抱怨 Deepseek 更新之后变得呆板木讷、情商降低的情况做了一种推测,那就是厂商有意识的降低 LLMs 的情商,以降低用户沉迷于与 LLMs 对话的可能性。这可能意味着训练对用户心理健康更有利的 LLMs 是有可能的。</p><p>我和 Deepseek 有一个持续了几个月的对话,帮助我解决了我遇到的一些很棘手的问题,我承认 LLMs 会出现幻觉,会把用户带偏,这些现象我也遇到过,但是 LLMs 的发展给了我们一个将心理支援大众化的机会,我们不能那么轻易的就抛弃它。</p><p><a href="https://x.com/aoim33/status/2045455591964062106" rel="nofollow" class="ellipsis" title="x.com/aoim33/status/2045455591964062106"><span class="invisible">https://</span><span class="ellipsis">x.com/aoim33/status/2045455591</span><span class="invisible">964062106</span></a></p><p><a href="/tags/ageverification/" rel="tag">#AgeVerification</a> <a href="/tags/ai/" rel="tag">#AI</a> <a href="/tags/llm/" rel="tag">#LLM</a><br><span class="h-card"><a href="https://ovo.st/club/board" class="u-url mention" rel="nofollow noopener noreferrer" target="_blank">@<span>board</span></a></span> <span class="h-card"><a href="https://ovo.st/club/worldboard" class="u-url mention" rel="nofollow noopener noreferrer" target="_blank">@<span>worldboard</span></a></span></p>
Edited 64d ago
<p>A large international study coordinated by the <a href="/tags/ebu/" rel="tag">#EBU</a> and led by the <a href="/tags/bbc/" rel="tag">#BBC</a> found that AI assistants misrepresent news content 45% of the time across different languages and platforms, with <a href="/tags/gemini/" rel="tag">#Gemini</a> performing the worst.</p><p>[…] Key findings: </p><p>• 45% of all AI answers had at least one significant issue.<br>• 31% of responses showed serious sourcing problems – missing, misleading, or incorrect attributions.<br>• 20% contained major accuracy issues, including hallucinated details and outdated information.<br>• Gemini performed worst with significant issues in 76% of responses, more than double the other assistants, largely due to its poor sourcing performance.<br>• Comparison between the BBC’s results earlier this year and this study show some improvements but still high levels of errors.</p><p><a href="https://www.bbc.co.uk/mediacentre/2025/new-ebu-research-ai-assistants-news-content" rel="nofollow" class="ellipsis" title="www.bbc.co.uk/mediacentre/2025/new-ebu-research-ai-assistants-news-content"><span class="invisible">https://</span><span class="ellipsis">www.bbc.co.uk/mediacentre/2025</span><span class="invisible">/new-ebu-research-ai-assistants-news-content</span></a></p><p><a href="/tags/aihype/" rel="tag">#aihype</a> <a href="/tags/llm/" rel="tag">#llm</a> <a href="/tags/openai/" rel="tag">#openai</a> <a href="/tags/perplexity/" rel="tag">#perplexity</a> <a href="/tags/chatgpt/" rel="tag">#chatgpt</a></p>
<p>Since 2017, we've maintained a <a href="https://nodebb.org/bounty" rel="nofollow ugc">bug bounty program</a> that awarded responsible disclosure of security vulnerabilities on a sliding scale of $64 to $512 based on severity.</p>
<p>Throughout the years we've made some unpublished changes to this bounty program, mostly related to the format (no videos, text only, allowed testing endpoints) and in some cases expanding the scope of covered plugins (e.g. 2factor, web-push).</p>
<p>With the rise of LLMs and the corresponding drop in ability needed to analyze and send in reports, we have been receiving a large increase in reports whose submitters have no ability to defend or support their claims, but are happy to pretend that they do. [...]</p>
<p>「那些真心相信自己拥有3倍或5倍生产力倍增效应的CEO们,会疯狂招人,争先恐后地抢占市场份额,以免竞争对手也发现同样的伎俩。</p><p>他们会积极进行再投资,拓展到相邻市场,以与所谓突破规模相匹配的速度进行建设。这种行为不仅体现在新闻稿中,还会体现在资本配置上。</p><p>相反,目前的模式是裁员、股票回购、创纪录的利润率以及关于转型的采访。言辞上说着革命,而实际行动却表明我们对此缺乏足够的信心,无法真正投入资金。」</p><p><a href="/tags/我在看什么/" rel="tag">#我在看什么</a> <a href="/tags/ai/" rel="tag">#AI</a> <a href="/tags/llm/" rel="tag">#LLM</a> </p><p><a href="https://readuncut.com/ai-and-the-productivity-fallacy/" rel="nofollow" class="ellipsis" title="readuncut.com/ai-and-the-productivity-fallacy/"><span class="invisible">https://</span><span class="ellipsis">readuncut.com/ai-and-the-produ</span><span class="invisible">ctivity-fallacy/</span></a></p>
<p>Researchers just mathematically proved that AI can't recursively self-improve its way to superintelligence.</p><p>Not "we think it's unlikely." Not "it seems hard." Formally proved.</p><p>The model doesn't climb toward AGI — it slowly forgets what reality looks like. They call it model collapse. The math calls it inevitable.<br>I wrote about it 👇</p><p><a href="https://smsk.dev/2026/04/26/ai-cannot-self-improve-and-math-behind-proves-it/" rel="nofollow" class="ellipsis" title="smsk.dev/2026/04/26/ai-cannot-self-improve-and-math-behind-proves-it/"><span class="invisible">https://</span><span class="ellipsis">smsk.dev/2026/04/26/ai-cannot-</span><span class="invisible">self-improve-and-math-behind-proves-it/</span></a></p><p><a href="/tags/ai/" rel="tag">#AI</a> <a href="/tags/machinelearning/" rel="tag">#MachineLearning</a> <a href="/tags/llm/" rel="tag">#LLM</a> <a href="/tags/research/" rel="tag">#Research</a></p>
