Artificial Intelligence: Difference between revisions

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One interesting essay I read was "''[https://adam.harvey.studio/creative-commons Creative Commons and the Face Recognition Problem]''" by Adam Harvey. He describes how 100 million images from Flickr were used to train facial recognition systems using peoples wedding and vacation photos.
One interesting essay I read was "''[https://adam.harvey.studio/creative-commons Creative Commons and the Face Recognition Problem]''" by Adam Harvey. He describes how 100 million images from Flickr were used to train facial recognition systems using peoples wedding and vacation photos.
== Understanding AI ==
An excellent introduction to Artificial Intelligence and Large Language Models (LLMs) is  an article [https://www.understandingai.org/p/large-language-models-explained-with Large language models, explained with a minimum of math and jargon]  by Timothy Lee and Sean Trott - July 27, 2023<blockquote>''Tim Lee is a journalist with a master’s degree in computer science. The article is the result of two months of in-depth research. Co-author Sean Trott is a cognitive scientist at the University of California, San Diego.''</blockquote>
[[Category:Artificial intelligence]]
[[Category:Artificial intelligence]]

Revision as of 16:24, 30 January 2025

ChatGPT is all the rage; stock market valuations of major companies like Alphabet (Google) fluctuate billions of dollars overnight due to perceived strength or weakness of the product's AI-powered features.


This page will capture some of the interesting points about AI and its use or relevance in Knowledge Management, MediaWiki, and probably some other tangents like deep fakes or politics.


One interesting essay I read was "Creative Commons and the Face Recognition Problem" by Adam Harvey. He describes how 100 million images from Flickr were used to train facial recognition systems using peoples wedding and vacation photos.

Understanding AI

An excellent introduction to Artificial Intelligence and Large Language Models (LLMs) is an article Large language models, explained with a minimum of math and jargon by Timothy Lee and Sean Trott - July 27, 2023

Tim Lee is a journalist with a master’s degree in computer science. The article is the result of two months of in-depth research. Co-author Sean Trott is a cognitive scientist at the University of California, San Diego.