Where did you think the training data was coming from?
Posted by speckx 3 hours ago
Comments
Comment by jeffrallen 1 minute ago
Comment by tracker1 11 minutes ago
Comment by goodmythical 1 hour ago
Not sure if the absolute first human verification systems were machine training, but it definitely became that quite quickly.
Like, did everyone just forget about the "provide feedback" button on your search pages? Or when google maps used to ask if its information was accurate?
And the fact that google/youtube/facebook/etc have almost always used your interactions to train algorithms to tune the machine learning not just for you but for everyone?
Why should it be any surprise that every new offering from these companies tracks user data in order to improve the economic efficiency of their models just as every single prior offering from these companies has always done?
Comment by sheept 1 hour ago
After all, as the owner of massive social networks, they already have plenty of cleaner, public data that has way more associated labels, like captions, comments, viewer engagement data, and that way they would avoid another data scandal. It's like how people think the Facebook app is secretly recording their microphone, even though their behavior is already obvious through just their and their friends' app engagement. The point of the glasses is to share your footage online, so the recordings would end up public anyways without Meta needing to do anything sneaky.
Comment by jaredcwhite 14 minutes ago
Unfortunately my confidence that any modern tech company could build such an AR web without it being based on horribly-invasive privacy-invading AI-training fascism-enabling user-hostile software is roughly zero. Thus the dream of AR will have to remain just that…a dream. Perhaps the sci-fi of it all should remain "fi".
Comment by tracker1 9 minutes ago
"Hey, it's getting close to lunch time, would you like some restaurant recommendations nearby?"
Comment by youknownothing 1 hour ago
Comment by 10000truths 1 hour ago
Comment by wrxd 30 minutes ago
Being first isn't going to be enough if Google and Apple manage to release something soon enough and with a better integration with all their other devices
Comment by AndrewKemendo 1 hour ago
Now also assume that you need data to train the robots and that you have a perspective that visual data will eventually be good enough to capture fine grained movement
So how do you go about capturing that data at the largest scale as fast as possible?
You give people an incentive to wear egocentric video cameras all day so that you can capture 100% of the data and actions from humans as they go through their life in order to transfer it to policy rollouts
Ultimately artificial intelligence is about transferring action policies from humans to machines and the fastest way to do that is to have 100% surveillance of a person
if people actively sign up for that that’s about as good as it gets
Comment by jmclnx 2 hours ago
But if you run any proprietary system, yes they are spying on you, maybe even if you disable what setting you can find. You can tape the camara, but the mic ? I think the only option is to disable the mic in the BIOS.
If you really care about spying, you really should be on Linux or a BSD. IMO, tinfoil hat people should be on OpenBSD, they disable the cam and mic at the OS level and does not have bluetooth at all. FWIW, I still believe bluetooth is a cesspool of security issues.
Comment by JohnFen 1 hour ago
From my experimentation, filling the little microphone hole with blu tack is pretty effective. Not as effective as opening the machine up and cutting out the microphone (my preferred solution), but close.