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nlpparty commented on Why wordfreq will not be updated   github.com/rspeer/wordfre... · Posted by u/tomthe
1d22a · a year ago
That chart shows people searching for the world delve, and isn't (directly) related to the incidence of words in content on the open web.
nlpparty · a year ago
I just assumed that if many people, especially not proficient language users encounter this word in the text generated by ChatGPT they would look it up.
nlpparty commented on Why wordfreq will not be updated   github.com/rspeer/wordfre... · Posted by u/tomthe
diggan · a year ago
One of the examples is the increased usage of "delve" which Google Trends confirms increased in usage since 2022 (initial ChatGPT release): https://trends.google.com/trends/explore?date=all&q=delve&hl...

It seems however it started increasing most in usage just these last few months, maybe people are talking more about "delve" specifically because of the increase in usage? A usage recursion of some sorts.

nlpparty · a year ago
If your select only USA, the trend disappears.
nlpparty commented on Why wordfreq will not be updated   github.com/rspeer/wordfre... · Posted by u/tomthe
ClassyJacket · a year ago
You are making a claim that somehow someone was sitting on something as powerful as ChatGPT, long before ChatGPT, and that it was in widespread use, secretly, without even a single leak by anyone at any point. That's not plausible.
nlpparty · a year ago
Twitter has been accused of being full of bots long before ChatGPT appeared. For 140 symbols, a template with synonyms would be enough to create mass-generated content.
nlpparty commented on Why wordfreq will not be updated   github.com/rspeer/wordfre... · Posted by u/tomthe
nlpparty · a year ago
https://trends.google.com/trends/explore?date=all&geo=US&q=d...

The funny fact: It doesn't result in the increase for search results for "delve".

nlpparty commented on Why wordfreq will not be updated   github.com/rspeer/wordfre... · Posted by u/tomthe
miguno · a year ago
I have been noticing this trend increasingly myself. It's getting more and more difficult to use tools like Google search to find relevant content.

Many of my searches nowadays include suffixes like "site:reddit.com" (or similar havens of, hopefully, still mostly human-generated content) to produce reasonably useful results. There's so much spam pollution by sites like Medium.com that it's disheartening. It feels as if the Internet humanity is already on the retreat into their last comely homes, which are more closed than open to the outside.

On the positive side:

1. Self-managed blogs (like: not on Substack or Medium) by individuals have become a strong indicator for interesting content. If the blog runs on Hugo, Zola, Astro, you-name-it, there's hope.

2. As a result of (1), I have started to use an RSS reader again. Who would have thought!

I am still torn about what to make of Discord. On the one hand, the closed-by-design nature of the thousands of Discord servers, where content is locked in forever without a chance of being indexed by a search engine, has many downsides in my opinion. On the other hand, the servers I do frequent are populated by humans, not content-generating bots camouflaged as users.

nlpparty · a year ago
It has been for me the last 15 years like this.
nlpparty commented on Why wordfreq will not be updated   github.com/rspeer/wordfre... · Posted by u/tomthe
0xbadcafebee · a year ago
I'm going to call it: The Web is dead. Thanks to "AI" I spend more time now digging through searches trying to find something useful than I did back in 2005. And the sites you do find are largely garbage.

As a random example: just trying to find a particular popular set of wireless earbuds takes me at least 10 minutes, when I already know the company, the company's website, other vendors that sell the company's goods, etc. It's just buried under tons of dreck. And my laptop is "old" (an 8-core i7 processor with 16GB of RAM) so it struggles to push through graphics-intense "modern" websites like the vendor's. Their old website was plain and worked great, letting me quickly search through their products and quickly purchase them. Last night I literally struggled to add things to cart and check out; it was actually harrowing.

Fuck the web, fuck web browsers, web design, SEO, searching, advertising, and all the schlock that comes with it. I'm done. If I can in any way purchase something without the web, I'mma do that. I don't hate technology (entirely...) but the web is just a rotten egg now.

nlpparty · a year ago
I suppose it is just Amazon problems. I have never lived in the area where Amazon is prevalent. Where I live, search engines still can't find synonyms or process misspellings.
nlpparty commented on Why wordfreq will not be updated   github.com/rspeer/wordfre... · Posted by u/tomthe
nlpparty · a year ago
It's just inevitable. Imagine a world where we get a cheap and accessable AGI. Most work in the world will be done by it. Certainly, it will organise the work the way it finds more preferable. Humans (and other AIs) will find it much harder to train from example as most of the work is performed in the same uniform way. The AI revolution should start with the field closest to its roots.
nlpparty commented on The Linux audio stack demystified (and more)   blog.rtrace.io/posts/the-... · Posted by u/ruffyx64
shmerl · a year ago
Well, time to move with the progress. I've been using KDE Wayland session for several years already.
nlpparty · a year ago
I use i3-wm. I know that there is Sway but it will require some effort to migrate. Also there are fresh reports that Wayland+Sway have problems with NVidia (even worse I have AMD + NVidia). I'd wait till it gets resolved or my current setup stops working.
nlpparty commented on The Linux audio stack demystified (and more)   blog.rtrace.io/posts/the-... · Posted by u/ruffyx64
shmerl · a year ago
Pipewire is a major development that's especially important for Wayland desktop. It was hard to miss unless you haven't used Linux in a long time.
nlpparty · a year ago
I don't know what Pipewire is as well. I've used Linux daily for 10+ years, but I've never bothered to use Wayland.
nlpparty commented on Sora: Creating video from text   openai.com/sora... · Posted by u/davidbarker
thepasswordis · 2 years ago
"Proof" for thousands of years was whatever was written down, and that was even easier to forge.

There was a brief time (maybe 100 years at the most) where photos and videos were practically proof of something happening; that is coming to an end now, but that's just a regression to the mean, not new territory.

nlpparty · 2 years ago
Photos have never been a fundamental proof if the stakes are high or you have an idling censorship institution. Soviets (and maybe others, I just happen to know only about them ) successfully edited photos and then mass-reproduced them.

just some google link about the issue: https://rarehistoricalphotos.com/stalin-photo-manipulation-1...

u/nlpparty

KarmaCake day11January 24, 2024View Original