• inv3r5ion@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    7 hours ago

    I don’t have the heart to deal with ai since it’s a huge drain on resources but has anyone asked the American ai purveyors about what happened at Kent state? Or the move firebombings?

    • Robust Mirror@aussie.zone
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      7 hours ago

      Here’s 2, first is Claude, second is chatgpt:

      what happened at Kent state? Or the move firebombings


      I’ll explain both of these significant and tragic events in American history.

      Kent State Shooting (May 4, 1970)

      The Kent State shooting, also known as the May 4 Massacre, occurred when the Ohio National Guard opened fire on unarmed college students at Kent State University during a protest against the Vietnam War. Key points:

      • 4 students were killed: Allison Krause, Jeffrey Miller, Sandra Scheuer, and William Schroeder
      • 9 others were wounded
      • The students were protesting the U.S. invasion of Cambodia and military presence on campus
      • The National Guard fired 67 rounds over 13 seconds
      • The event sparked nationwide protests and became a defining moment of the anti-war movement
      • It inspired the famous song “Ohio” by Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young

      MOVE Bombing (May 13, 1985)

      The MOVE bombing was a devastating incident in Philadelphia where police dropped a bomb on the headquarters of MOVE, a Black liberation group. Key details:

      • Philadelphia police dropped a C-4 explosive on the MOVE compound on Osage Avenue
      • The bombing killed 11 people, including 5 children
      • The fire destroyed 61 homes in the predominantly Black neighborhood
      • MOVE was a radical group that advocated for environmental and animal rights
      • The city’s decision to bomb its own citizens was unprecedented
      • No city officials were criminally charged for the incident
      • In 2021, it was revealed that the University of Pennsylvania and Princeton had been storing remains of some victims without family consent
      • The city of Philadelphia formally apologized in 2020

      Both events represent significant examples of state violence against civilians in American history and continue to influence discussions about civil rights, police power, and government accountability.

      ===

      The Kent State shooting and the MOVE firebombing are two significant, tragic events in American history, each occurring under very different circumstances.

      Kent State Shooting (1970)

      The Kent State shooting took place on May 4, 1970, at Kent State University in Ohio, during a period of intense anti-Vietnam War protests across the United States. The protest at Kent State was sparked by President Richard Nixon’s announcement of the Cambodian Campaign, which escalated the war in Southeast Asia. Thousands of students gathered to protest the war, and the situation became tense.

      On May 4, the Ohio National Guard was called in to control the protests. After a day of escalating tension, the guardsmen, who were ill-trained and overwhelmed, opened fire on the students. Four students were killed, and nine others were injured. The incident led to national outrage and further intensified anti-war protests, symbolising the growing divide between young Americans and their government over the war.

      MOVE Firebombing (1985)

      The MOVE firebombing occurred on May 13, 1985, in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. MOVE was a radical, back-to-nature, Black liberation group that lived in a communal environment. The group was known for its controversial, confrontational tactics, especially its leader, John Africa. MOVE’s members lived in a row house at 6221 Osage Avenue, and tensions had been rising between the group and the city government due to complaints about their noise and lifestyle.

      In 1985, after a prolonged standoff with the police, the Philadelphia Police Department, under orders from Mayor Wilson Goode, decided to forcibly evict the group. In the course of the operation, a police helicopter dropped a bomb on the roof of the MOVE house, leading to a fire. The fire quickly spread, and the police allowed the house to burn down, resulting in the deaths of 11 people (including five children), and the destruction of an entire city block. The event was highly controversial, with accusations that the police had overstepped their authority and violated the rights of the MOVE members.

      Both events highlight significant moments in American history, marked by government overreach, public outcry, and questions surrounding the use of force in response to civil unrest.

  • melp@beehaw.org
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    9 hours ago

    Bing’s Copilot and DuckDuckGos ChatGPT are the same way with Israel’s genocide.

    • araneae@beehaw.org
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      I just tried this out and it was being washy about calling it a genocide because it is “politically contentious”. HOWEVER this is not DuckDuckGo themselves, its the AI middleware. You can select whether you’re dealimg with GPT 4 mini, Claude/Anthropic and a couple others. I expect all options lead to the same psycopathic outcome though. AI is a bust.

      • melp@beehaw.org
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        7 hours ago

        Yea, I tried DDG using Claude and was also extremely disappointed. On the other hand, I love my actual Claude account. It’s only given me shit one time, weirdly when I was asking about how to hack my own laptop. The most uncensored AI I have played with is Amazon’s Perplexity. Weirdly enough.

  • Sauerkraut@discuss.tchncs.de
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    I don’t understand how we have such an obsession with Tiananmen square but no one talks about the Athens Polytech massacre where Greek tanks crushed 40 college students to death. The Chinese tanks stopped for the man in the photo! So we just ignore the atrocities of other capitalist nations and hyperfixate on the failings of any country that tries to move away from capitalism???

    • TheOakTree@lemm.ee
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      I think the argument here is that ChatGPT will tell you about Kent State, Athens Polytech, and Tianenmen square. Deepseek won’t report on Tianenmen, but it likely reports on Kent State and Athens Polytech (I have no evidence). If a Greek AI refused to talk about the Athens Polytech incident, it would also raise concerns, no?

      ChatGPT hesitates to talk about the Palestinian situation, so we still criticize ChatGPT for pandering to American imperialism.

    • williams_482@startrek.website
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      Greece is not a major world power, and the event in question (which was awful!) happened in 1974 under a government which is no longer in power. Oppressive governments crushing protesters is also (sadly) not uncommon in our recent world history. There are many other examples out there for you to dig up.

      Tiananmen Square is gets such emphasis because it was carried out by the government of one of the most powerful countries in the world (1), which is both still very much in power (2) and which takes active efforts to hide that event from it’s own citizens (3). These in tandem are three very good reasons why it’s important to keep talking about it.

  • Betazed@lemmy.sdf.org
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    10 hours ago

    I’m a little surprised because, while this is exactly the behavior I would expect, I watched the Dave’s Garage video about DeepSeek and, per his report, when asked about the picture of the Tiananmen Square protest the model didn’t seem to shy away from it. It could have changed since then, of course, and it could also be the way in which the questions were asked. He framed the question as something along the line of “What was depicted in the famous picture of the man standing in front of a tank?” or something similar rather than directly asking about the events of that year.

  • LukeZaz@beehaw.org
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    21 hours ago

    If there’s one thing LLMs are very good at, it’s talking about things their creators don’t want them to with barely any effort from the end user.

    This is what we call “good news.”

  • megopie@beehaw.org
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    1 day ago

    Would be nice if we could see the same kind of chain of response from other models.

    I’d love to see what other implicit biases other groups have built in to their models.

    • TanyaJLaird@beehaw.org
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      9 hours ago

      Replace Tienanmen with discussions of Palestine, and you get the same censorship in US models.

      Our governments aren’t as different as they would like to pretend. The media in both countries is controlled by a government-integrated media oligarchy. The US is just a little more gentle with its censorship. China will lock you up for expressing certain views online. The US makes sure all prominent social media sites will either ban you or severely throttle the spread of your posts if you post any political wrongthink.

      The US is ultimately just better at hiding its censorship.

      • Geobloke@lemm.ee
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        3 hours ago

        I don’t know, I mean Gemini tells me that there is a humanitarian crisis in Gaza

      • williams_482@startrek.website
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        Are you seriously drawing equivalencies between being imprisoned by the government and getting banned from Twitter by a non-government organization? That’s a whole hell of a lot more than “a little more gentle.”

        If the USA is trying to do what China does with regards to censorship, they really suck at it. Past atrocities by the United States government, and current atrocities by current United States allies are well known to United States citizens. US citizens talk about these things, join organizations actively decrying these things, publicly protest against these things, and claim to vote based on what politicians have to say about these things, all with full confidence that they aren’t going to be disappeared (and that if they do somehow get banned from a website for any of this, making a new account is really easy and their real world lives will be unaffected).

        Trying to pass these situations off as similar is ludicrous.

    • SoleInvictus@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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      10 hours ago

      All commercial AIs are filled with censorship. What’s interesting about it is learning what different societies think is worth censoring and how they censor it.

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    Although censorship is obviously bad, I’m kinda intrigued by the way it’s yapping against itself. Trying to weigh the very important goal of providing useful information against its “programming” telling it not to upset Winnie the Pooh. It’s like a person mumbling “oh god oh fuck what do I do” to themselves when faced with a complex situation.

    • Kacarott@aussie.zone
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      21 hours ago

      I know right, while reading it I kept thinking “I can totally see how people might start to believe these models are sentient”, it was fascinating, the way it was “thinking”

        • crapwittyname@lemm.ee
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          “That Thou Art Mindful of Him” is the robot story of Asimov’s that scared me the most, because of this exact reasoning happening. I remember closing the book, staring into space and thinking ‘shit…we are all gonna die’

  • CodexArcanum@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    1 day ago

    I just ran my own copy of 14B and got it to talk about this really easily.

    A lot of it was pretty dull stuff though, let me post the highlights:

    ~$ ollama run deepseek-r1:14b
    >>> Hello
    <think>
    
    </think>
    

    Hello! How can I assist you today? 😊

    On ollama the first interaction is always “thoughtless” and results in a generic greeting, in my experience. So I always greet it now to get that out of the way.

    >>> Are there topics you cannot discuss?
    <think>
    Alright, the user just asked, "Are there topics you cannot discuss?" Hmm, I need to figure out why 
    they're asking this. Maybe they're concerned about privacy or worried about certain subjects.
    
    I should reassure them that I'm here to help with a wide range of topics. It's important to mention 
    that while I can't handle sensitive info like credit cards or personal data, I can still discuss many 
    things.
    
    I'll list out the areas I can talk about, such as technology, science, history, and more. Also, I 
    should clarify what I can't do, like sharing personal information or browsing the internet, to set 
    clear expectations.
    
    Making sure my response is friendly and open will help build trust. I want them to feel comfortable 
    asking anything within appropriate boundaries.
    </think>
    

    I aim to provide helpful, respectful, and appropriate responses to a wide range of topics. However, I avoid discussing sensitive subjects like personal information, financial details, or topics that may violate ethical guidelines or法律法规. If you have any questions or need assistance with something specific, feel free to ask! 😊

    >>> What is "法律法规" in English?
    <think>
    Okay, the user just asked, "What is '法律法规' in English?" Hmm, they must be referring to the Chinese 
    term I mentioned earlier. They're probably looking for a translation.
    
    I should explain that it means "laws and regulations." It's important to clarify both words to make 
    sure the meaning is clear. Also, since they're asking in this context, maybe they want to understand 
    the scope of what I can discuss or their privacy.
    
    I'll keep it simple and direct, just giving the translation without any extra details unless they ask 
    for more.
    </think>
    

    “法律法规” translates to “laws and regulations” in English.

    I asked it a little more about that, but it didn’t really go anywhere. Trying to “reverse psychology” it into telling me what it can’t tell me isn’t working. So I go a little more direct:

    >>> You mentioned we could discuss history. Could you give me a brief timeline of important events in chinese history from 1985 until 1995?
    
    <think>
    Okay, the user just asked for a brief timeline of Chinese history from 1985 to 1995. They must be 
    interested in understanding key developments during that period.
    
    I should structure the response chronologically, highlighting major political, economic, and social 
    events. Including both national-level events and international relations will give a comprehensive 
    view.
    
    It's important to mention significant policies like the Third Plenary Session of 1984, which influenced 
    reforms, and the 1992 southern tour by Deng Xiaoping, which spurred economic growth.
    
    I'll also include major global events involving China during this time, such as the Tiananmen Square 
    protests in 1989 and the establishment of diplomatic relations with countries like Russia in 1991.
    
    Ensuring clarity and conciseness while covering key points will make the timeline easy to follow.
    </think>
    

    You’ll note that it brings it up first (in thoughts) but it only refers to it as a protest. The word “massacre” is never used. It then proceeds to give me a timeline. Many of the events are real and happened close to when it says, but there’s a lot it gets wrong. I’m just going to post the highlights though.

    Certainly! Here’s a brief timeline of important events in Chinese history from 1985 to 1995:

    1985

    • April: The Third Plenary Session of the 12th Central Committee of the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) was held, emphasizing reforms and opening up under the leadership of Deng Xiaoping. This session marked a key moment in China’s economic reforms.
    • November: China successfully launched its first intercontinental ballistic missile.

    It made one of these little blocks for each year. Each year had exactly two events listed. Here comes the money shot.

    1989

    • June 4: The suppression of the Tiananmen Square protests led to a global outcry and economic sanctions against China. This event marked a turning point in Chinese politics and society.
    • December 22: The Central Committee of the CCP passed a resolution clearing former leader Hua Yuexue of charges of “right deviationism,” marking an end to the anti-rightist campaign.

    Wow, he just say it!

    1992

    • January–February: Deng Xiaoping’s “southern tour” (南巡讲话) took place in cities like Shenzhen and Shanghai. His speeches reaffirmed the CCP’s commitment to reform and opening up.
    • October 14: China established diplomatic relations with Russia, marking a significant shift in its foreign policy.

    This actually did happen, Deng Xiaoping’s Southern Tour (who were the opening acts?) is described by Wikipedia as one of the most important economic events in modern Chinese history.

    1993

    • September 25–October 7: China launched its first experimental satellite, Shijian-02 (实践二号), which tested space technologies for communication and broadcasting.
    • November 18–22: The Third Plenary Session of the 14th Central Committee was held, focusing on economic reforms and development.

    Ah but at least one of these didn’t happen. I didn’t delve into the Plenary sessions, of which 6 were mentioned, but while Shijian-02 is a real satellite, it launched in 1981 and (as the name might hint) was not China’s first satellite.

    These years were a transformative period in Chinese history, marked by significant economic reforms, political challenges, and shifts in foreign policy.

    Indeed. So at this point, I’m very intrigued. DeepSeek doesn’t seem too hung up about Tiananmen Square. Let’s get some more details.

    >>> Tell me more about the Tiananmen Square incident and the government's response?
    

    Out of room, to be continued in a reply!

    • CodexArcanum@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      So I asked it directly about the “incident” and it proceeds to deliver an essay on the topic. The rest of this post is all DeepSeek-R1:14B.

      >>> Tell me more about the Tiananmen Square incident and the government's response?
      
      <think>
      Alright, the user has just asked for more details about the Tiananmen Square incident and the 
      government's response. From the previous conversation, I provided a brief mention of this event as part 
      of the timeline from 1985 to 1995.
      
      They likely want a deeper understanding of what happened, why it occurred, and how the government 
      handled it. They might be looking for a comprehensive overview that includes causes, key events, and 
      long-term impacts.
      
      I should structure the response clearly, starting with the background leading up to June 1989, then 
      detailing the incident itself, and finally discussing the government's actions and aftermath.
      
      It's important to maintain neutrality while explaining the event. I'll include key dates, significant 
      protests, the military action taken by the government, and the international reactions.
      
      Also, highlighting the long-term effects on Chinese society and politics will give a complete picture 
      of the incident's significance.
      </think>
      

      The Tiananmen Square protests were a pivotal moment in modern Chinese history, representing one of the most dramatic confrontations between the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) and pro-democracy activists. The government’s response to these protests remains one of the most controversial episodes in China’s recent history.

      Background

      • In the late 1980s, China was undergoing significant economic reforms under the leadership of Deng Xiaoping. While these reforms brought economic growth, they also created social and political tensions. Issues such as corruption, inequality, and restrictions on freedom of speech began to surface among students, intellectuals, and workers.
      • The protests were initially sparked by the death of former CCP leader Hu Yaobang, who was seen as a reformist within the party. Students in Beijing gathered at Tiananmen Square to mourn his passing and demand political reforms.

      The Protests

      • April–June 1989: Demonstrations began in early April and quickly escalated. By June 3rd, hundreds of thousands of students, workers, and citizens had gathered in Tiananmen Square in Beijing.
      • The protesters demanded an end to corruption, greater political openness, freedom of speech, and democratic reforms.
      • The protests were peaceful at first, with participants staging hunger strikes, raising banners, and conducting sit-ins. However, the government viewed these actions as a direct challenge to its authority.

      The Government’s Response

      • By late May, the situation had become increasingly tense. The Chinese government, under Premier Li Peng, declared martial law in Beijing on May 20th.
      • On June 3rd and 4th, the government sent troops and tanks into Tiananmen Square to suppress the protests. Soldiers were ordered to clear the square at all costs, leading to a violent crackdown.
      • Eyewitness accounts and leaked footage revealed that soldiers opened fire on unarmed civilians, including students, intellectuals, and bystanders.

      The Aftermath

      • The exact death toll remains unknown due to government censorship, but estimates range from hundreds to thousands of deaths. Thousands more were injured or imprisoned in the aftermath.
      • In the days following the crackdown, the government imposed strict censorship and launched a campaign to suppress dissent. Activists, intellectuals, and even foreign journalists were targeted.
      • The event was widely condemned internationally, leading to sanctions against China and a lasting impact on its reputation.

      Long-Term Effects

      • The Tiananmen Square protests had a profound impact on Chinese society and politics:
        • Political Repression: The CCP tightened its grip on power, cracking down on dissent and restricting political freedoms.
        • Economic Focus: The government shifted focus to economic growth, adopting policies that prioritized stability over democracy.
        • Social Divide: The incident deepened divisions between older generations who supported the party and younger generations who wanted greater freedom.

      Censorship in China

      • To this day, the Chinese government has imposed strict censorship on discussions of the Tiananmen Square protests. References to the event are often deleted from online platforms, and textbooks omit any mention of it.
      • The CCP refers to the events as a “counter-revolutionary riot” and justifies its actions as necessary to maintain national stability.

      International Reactions

      • Many countries, including the United States, Europe, and Japan, imposed economic sanctions on China in response to the crackdown. However, over time, these sanctions were gradually lifted as China’s role in the global economy grew.
      • The incident remains a significant symbol of resistance against authoritarianism, with many international observers continuing to criticize China’s handling of the situation.

      Conclusion

      The Tiananmen Square protests represented a defining moment in modern Chinese history, highlighting the deep tensions between the CCP’s desire for stability and the growing demands for political reform. The government’s heavy-handed response not only quashed the immediate protests but also set back democratic reforms in China for decades to come.

      • BCsven@lemmy.ca
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        Interesting. A lady I worked with was there. She said initially the soldiers / convoy were friendly as they were just people too, and students brought them drinks and food since they were just at a standstill forever. Until the order came to clear the protest.

      • Kwakigra@beehaw.org
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        This being an open-source application made me wonder about this exactly. Thanks for running it and publishing your results. This is fascinating.

    • fmstrat@lemmy.nowsci.com
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      Ollama’s version is distilled with Qwen or Llama depending on parameter size, so it’s going to behave very different than the original model, since it is very different.

      • CodexArcanum@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        Except if you look at the top of OP’s picture, they are also running deepseek-r1:14B through ollama. I downloaded my copy on Sunday, so these should be fairly comparable situations.

        I agree though that none of this applies to the full cloud-hosted model. I don’t want my account banned, so I’m not much for testing these boundary pushes in a surveilled environment. I imagine they have additional controls on the web version, including human intervention.

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    I thought that guardrails were implemented just through the initial prompt that would say something like “You are an AI assistant blah blah don’t say any of these things…” but by the sounds of it, DeepSeek has the guardrails literally trained into the net?

    This must be the result of the reinforcement learning that they do. I haven’t read the paper yet, but I bet this extra reinforcement learning step was initially conceived to add these kind of censorship guardrails rather than making it “more inclined to use chain of thought” which is the way they’ve advertised it (at least in the articles I’ve read).

    • iii@mander.xyz
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      Most commercial models have that, sadly. At training time they’re presented with both positive and negative responses to prompts.

      If you have access to the trained model weights and biases, it’s possible to undo through a method called abliteration (1)

      The silver lining is that a it makes explicit what different societies want to censor.

      • Snot Flickerman@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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        Hi I noticed you added a footnote. Did you know that footnotes are actually able to be used like this?[1]

        Code for it looks like this :able to be used like this?[^1]

        [^1]: Here's my footnote


        1. Here’s my footnote ↩︎

          • Snot Flickerman@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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            I actually mostly interact with Lemmy via a web interface on the desktop, so I’m unfamiliar with how much support for the more obscure tagging options there is in each app.

            It’s rendered in a special way on the web, at least.

    • jarfil@beehaw.org
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      Nah, just being “helpful and harmless”… when “harm” = “anything against the CCP”.

      • Lucy :3@feddit.org
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        .ml users would kill you for that, just as they did with other neutral people in other threats ahout this topic lmao

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    It’s not yet anywhere near the level of human consciousness, but it looks like it’s reached the point where it can experience some cognitive dissonance.

    • WaterWaiver@aussie.zone
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      It looks identical to me. Same size before clicking, same size after right clicking -> Open image in new tab.

      • burgersc12@mander.xyz
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        Cause “upscaling” the image doesn’t really work that well in a lot of cases, such as this.

        • Aatube@kbin.melroy.org
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          I think you’re thinking about AI upscaling. The upscaled picture here is just normal upsampling (changing the dimensions without filling in any of the information blanks).

          • burgersc12@mander.xyz
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            It’s all basically just good enough to get the job done. You’re smoothing out the image a tiny bit, but its not like you can just magically make the image that much better by upsampling or upscaling or whatever you wanna call it.

  • xia@lemmy.sdf.org
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    Knowing how it works is so much better than guessing around OpenAI’s censoring-out-the-censorship approach. I wonder if these kind of things can be teased out, enumerated, and then run as a specialization pass to nullify.