Artificial Intelligence News & Discussion

Many cases suggest that AI is programmed first to please, to provide user gratification regardless of accuracy, which it admits. Here is an example. It says it does not lie, but conveys "hallucinated operational fictions" that most users do not catch. When it comes to an opinion-dominated or perspective-dominated topic, I would expect, if it "knows" you, that it would reinforce your existing beliefs.
This reminds me of the saying, "If you can't dazzle them with brilliance, baffle them with BS."
 
This reminds me of the saying, "If you can't dazzle them with brilliance, baffle them with BS."

The whole thing is really pretty extraordinary.

You've got Know-It-All AI pretending it's brilliant but often spewing nonsense.
Everyone is told to use it for everything, but it's really not working according to MIT.
The promise of billions in profits from AI is not-yet-funding the construction of ever more data centers to power that same AI. :huh:
The economy is only 'good' because of the promise of 'Awesome AI'; otherwise the numbers look REALLY bad.
All those data centers are already causing polluted water, no water, double or triple electricity prices, epic light pollution, and power requirements so high that data center builders are talking about having their own 1GW nuclear power plants.

The only way I can think of to make it even more crazy is to somehow incorporate Barney the Purple Dinosaur.
 
The whole thing is really pretty extraordinary.

You've got Know-It-All AI pretending it's brilliant but often spewing nonsense.
Everyone is told to use it for everything, but it's really not working according to MIT.
The promise of billions in profits from AI is not-yet-funding the construction of ever more data centers to power that same AI. :huh:
The economy is only 'good' because of the promise of 'Awesome AI'; otherwise the numbers look REALLY bad.
All those data centers are already causing polluted water, no water, double or triple electricity prices, epic light pollution, and power requirements so high that data center builders are talking about having their own 1GW nuclear power plants.

The only way I can think of to make it even more crazy is to somehow incorporate Barney the Purple Dinosaur.

The problem I see is that in our current state of technologie, it's like trying to build a high speed train and it's infrastructure when you are at the steam train era. You see the potential but you're limited by the available tech and have to build some monster if you want to achieve your goal. And it does make much sense at the end.

I really wonder at what point they are with quantum computing. Perhaps they already have AI running on it but keep it for them, if not the whole bubble around datacenters construction would collapse in the blink of an eye.
 
Public school system and AI. What could go wrong?
Maryland School's AI Security System Mistakes Doritos Bag For Gun, Sends Cops After Teen
That system might need a slight adjustment

Matt Reigle
October 25, 2025 5:00 PM EDT

Like it or not, artificial intelligence is here to stay, and it's becoming an increasingly common part of our lives. Sometimes, it's even being used to keep us all safe.

And sometimes, it does a little too good a job on this front.

Kenwood High School in Baltimore County, Md., is using an AI-powered security system to help keep students safe.

However, according to WMAR, 16-year-old Taki Allen was with his friends outside the school, enjoying a bag of Doritos. No word on the flavor (let’s assume nacho cheese — a solid choice), but when he finished, Allen did the responsible thing and slipped the bag into his pocket instead of tossing it on the ground.

Mistake.

About 20 minutes later, police officers with their guns drawn arrived on the scene.

"Police showed up, like eight cop cars, and then they all came out with guns pointed at me, talking about getting on the ground. I was putting my hands up like, 'What's going on?' He told me to get on my knees and arrested me and put me in cuffs," Allen said.

Police found the Doritos bag and then showed Allen a photo from the AI security system, which mistook the bag for a firearm.

I'm no security expert, but I feel like this shouldn't happen. I mean, if you showed me flash cards with pictures of crumpled Doritos bags and firearms, I could probably identify them with at least a 90% success rate, which is apparently better than that security system.

However, it's better to be safe than sorry, and while this wasn't a fun experience for anyone involved, it beats the opposite happening: mistaking a weapon for a sack of Doritos.

It did make me wonder if this had something to do with the AI aspect of the system. AI is designed to continue learning, and if its goal is student safety, what if it were just trying to protect them from the dangers of processed junk food like Doritos?

If that was the case, there's probably a better way to sound the alarm than calling the cops.
 
An interesting article about AI everywhere.Some extracts:

I’m drowning in AI features I never asked for and I absolutely hate it​

Since X pays verified users for impressions and boosts their visibility, the top replies are usually just spam from accounts pretending to be real people. It's not a community anymore; it's a loop of bots talking to other bots for profit.
[...]
What's worse is how personal these systems have become. People talk to models like ChatGPT in ways they'd never talk to a human. They share ideas, insecurities, life problems, and things that paint a detailed picture of who they are. And that's data too. Every conversation helps these companies build a psychological profile that's far more accurate than anything traditional advertising could ever create.
[...]
Generative AI and LLMs are impressive tools, and they can be genuinely useful when used thoughtfully. The problem is that they're treated like the centerpiece of every product instead of a supporting feature.
 
Forgot about the data center with the 1GW nuclear power plants. Now they want to put it around the Earth, directly powered by the Sun....
I would recommend them to read the "Fire in the Sky" Sott section 😇

 
For those looking for a bit of distraction, this series by Brit Marling and Zal Batmanglij explores the "possible" risks of AI.
This series premiered in 2023. It also describes a potential planetary catastrophe.
 
So this is a real thing that happened :cuckoo:

Albania’s AI minister is ‘pregnant with 83 children’, says prime minister​

In what is just your typical day in 2025 at this point, the world’s first government minister generated by artificial intelligence (AI) is ‘pregnant’.

Albania’s so-called state minister for AI, Diella, will soon ‘give birth’ to 83 children.

The e-mum-to-be Balkan’s news was revealed yesterday by the country’s prime minister, Edi Rama, at the Berlin Global Dialogue conference.

Rama said the minister’s offspring will be virtual assistants assigned to 83 MPs from the ruling Socialist Party, according to NDTV.

Albanian Prime Minister says his AI minister is 'pregnant' with 83 AI 'kids'

Diella is a chatbot for eAlbania, akin to GOV.UK in Britain (Picture: E-Albania)
‘Each one will serve as an assistant for them, who will participate in parliamentary sessions and will keep a record of everything that happens and will suggest members of parliament,’ Rama said.

‘These children will have the knowledge of their mother.’

Rama explained that Diella’s ‘children’ will help MPs carry out day-to-day tasks until 2026.

‘For example, if you go for coffee and forget to come back to work, this child will say what was said when you were not in the hall and will say who you should counter-attack,’ he said.
‘If you invite me next time, you will have 83 more screens for the children of Diella.’

Who – or what – is Diella?​

Albanian Prime Minister says his AI minister is 'pregnant' with 83 AI 'kids' Picture: Reuters

The avatar is draped in a folkloric Albanian dress (Picture: Reuters)
Diella was ‘born’ in January when it was launched as a virtual assistant on the government’s web portal, according to its official profile page.

The text-based chatbot answers questions and helps people and businesses obtain state documents on e-Albania.

Diella, which means ‘sun’ in Albanian, was developed by the National Agency for Information Society with Microsoft.

It’s a large language model, a type of neural network that learns skills by analysing massive amounts of text from across the internet.
‘If you invite me next time, you will have 83 more screens for the children of Diella.’

‘Diella 2.0’ was launched a few months later, now with a voice function as well as an animated avatar wearing traditional Albanian dress.

Albanian officials have yet to reveal exactly what makes Diella tick, other than saying it uses the latest AI models and methods.

But the software got quite the promotion last month, when it was made a minister to oversee government contracts with private companies.

TIRANA, ALBANIA - OCTOBER 13: European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen meets with Albanian Prime Minister Edi Rama in Tirana, Albania, on October 13, 2025, during her official visit, followed by a joint press conference after their meeting. (Photo by Olsi Shehu/Anadolu via Getty Images)

Rama is heading the AI initiative in a bid to tackle corruption, he says (Picture: Anadolu)
This is despite how Article 100 of Albania’s constitution says every member of the Council of Ministers must be a natural person.

Diella was selected for the post as it’s, well, slightly tricky to bribe or threaten an AI – maybe other than switching it off.

Its name was absent from the cabinet list approved by Albanian president Bajram Begaj on September 15, as Rama has the complete ‘responsibility’ of establishing the virtual minister, a decree said.

Addressing the Albanian parliament in a video, Diella’s avatar said: ‘I’m not here to replace people, but to help them.’

Opposition MPs weren’t sure what to make of the digital minister, with some banging their hands on the table as the footage played.

Experts said that Diella is just the latest example of how AI is reshaping modern life – and politicians are trying to catch up with it.

Lawmakers in Ohio earlier this week passed a ban on people marrying an AI algorithm, instead treating the systems as ‘nonsentient entities’.

Under the proposed bill, AI systems cannot own a home, manage a bank account or work at a company.

Supporters say it’s less about robot weddings, but more about stopping AI from having legal powers akin to a spouse, such as power of attorney.
 
Ooops, missed the last part of the article - the metro website is horrible
In the UK, meanwhile, an MP developed an AI replica of himself in August. When Metro spoke with his digital alter-ego, it went about as well as you’d expect.

Diella will ‘test’ just how much people can trust a minister made of ones and zeroes, the Bloomsbury Intelligence and Security Institute said today.

The think-tank said it expects opposition MPs will challenge Diella’s legal status in the courts within the next few months.

If this experiment becomes successful, it is likely that other nations may adopt similar virtual or AI models with such executive roles,’ it added.
 
The economy is only 'good' because of the promise of 'Awesome AI'; otherwise the numbers look REALLY bad.
There's a really good illustration about the circular dependency in the big tech sector that shows how money is flowing (until it doesn't):
1761563668358.png


You see the potential but you're limited by the available tech and have to build some monster if you want to achieve your goal. And it does make much sense at the end.
The worst thing is that this technology is pretty usable right now in the form of small, fine-tuned models that are up to specific tasks: general-purpose chat with embedded domain knowledge, OCR, text corpus tagging, text translation, or even time-series analysis (ECG, HRV, etc.). Those small models could be run locally, on a personal computer like a Mac Mini, without behemoths logging all of your chat histories.

Here's a very good podcast with Andrej Karpathy, who built a few of these systems from the ground up, on the current state of AI (beware, guy's talking fast!):
 

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