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  3. This blogpost makes an astoundingly good case about LLMs I hadn't considered before.

This blogpost makes an astoundingly good case about LLMs I hadn't considered before.

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  • cwebber@social.coopC cwebber@social.coop

    This blogpost makes an astoundingly good case about LLMs I hadn't considered before. The collapse of public forums (like Stack Overflow) for programming answers coincides directly with the rise of programmers asking for answers from chatbots *directly*. Those debugging sessions become part of a training set that now *only private LLM corporations have access to*. This is something that "open models" seemingly can't easily fight. https://michiel.buddingh.eu/enclosure-feedback-loop

    travisfw@fosstodon.orgT This user is from outside of this forum
    travisfw@fosstodon.orgT This user is from outside of this forum
    travisfw@fosstodon.org
    wrote sidst redigeret af
    #32

    yup.
    Competition for dominance necessitates enclosure of the commons, limiting the use of extremely valuable common human dimensions to just the aggressive (or aggressively funded), precluding creative potentialities except only when championed by insiders in line with corporate financial models.
    Over and over, humanity suffers profound losses.

    1 Reply Last reply
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    • mahadevank@mastodon.socialM mahadevank@mastodon.social

      @cwebber of course guys - it was never about the LLM, it was about crowd-sourcing intelligence at an epic-scale. Every piece of code a developer writes and fixes becomes training data. Same with every conversation. I'm surprised people don't see the danger in having one single overlord and gatekeeper of all information in the world. Its crazy.

      People seem to have forgotten what the real meaning of democracy and multi-lateralism are.

      cmthiede@social.vivaldi.netC This user is from outside of this forum
      cmthiede@social.vivaldi.netC This user is from outside of this forum
      cmthiede@social.vivaldi.net
      wrote sidst redigeret af
      #33

      @mahadevank @cwebber Forget trying to explain that. The "experts" at Davos laid it out for everyone. Yet, somehow they're still optimistic that one entity dominating all others, essentially destroying competition, will bring forth a world of opportunities. It's an all out war, and anyone that doesn't have the resources to insert XYZ's brain into their stack, is just a foot soldier for those that do.

      mahadevank@mastodon.socialM 1 Reply Last reply
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      • cwebber@social.coopC cwebber@social.coop

        This blogpost makes an astoundingly good case about LLMs I hadn't considered before. The collapse of public forums (like Stack Overflow) for programming answers coincides directly with the rise of programmers asking for answers from chatbots *directly*. Those debugging sessions become part of a training set that now *only private LLM corporations have access to*. This is something that "open models" seemingly can't easily fight. https://michiel.buddingh.eu/enclosure-feedback-loop

        cmthiede@social.vivaldi.netC This user is from outside of this forum
        cmthiede@social.vivaldi.netC This user is from outside of this forum
        cmthiede@social.vivaldi.net
        wrote sidst redigeret af
        #34

        @cwebber I'm so glad I stumbled upon this thread, pointing out the fascist nature of the global AI race so many are calling the great democratizer. With enough critical thinkers, maybe civilization will come to its senses before hyperscale data centers become this era's pyramids to explore in the future.

        1 Reply Last reply
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        • cwebber@social.coopC cwebber@social.coop

          This blogpost makes an astoundingly good case about LLMs I hadn't considered before. The collapse of public forums (like Stack Overflow) for programming answers coincides directly with the rise of programmers asking for answers from chatbots *directly*. Those debugging sessions become part of a training set that now *only private LLM corporations have access to*. This is something that "open models" seemingly can't easily fight. https://michiel.buddingh.eu/enclosure-feedback-loop

          xgranade@wandering.shopX This user is from outside of this forum
          xgranade@wandering.shopX This user is from outside of this forum
          xgranade@wandering.shop
          wrote sidst redigeret af
          #35

          @cwebber And here I was thinking "docs in Discord" was bad enough.

          1 Reply Last reply
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          • michiel@social.tchncs.deM michiel@social.tchncs.de

            @cwebber you calling it an 'astoundingly good case' makes me feel insightful in a way no LLM has been able to accomplish. I'm going to be insufferably smug for the rest of the day 🙂

            cwebber@social.coopC This user is from outside of this forum
            cwebber@social.coopC This user is from outside of this forum
            cwebber@social.coop
            wrote sidst redigeret af
            #36

            @michiel Haha, you deserve it! An angle I hadn't considered, it really shook me up and I spent a ton of time thinking about it since.

            1 Reply Last reply
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            • cwebber@social.coopC cwebber@social.coop

              This blogpost makes an astoundingly good case about LLMs I hadn't considered before. The collapse of public forums (like Stack Overflow) for programming answers coincides directly with the rise of programmers asking for answers from chatbots *directly*. Those debugging sessions become part of a training set that now *only private LLM corporations have access to*. This is something that "open models" seemingly can't easily fight. https://michiel.buddingh.eu/enclosure-feedback-loop

              datarama@hachyderm.ioD This user is from outside of this forum
              datarama@hachyderm.ioD This user is from outside of this forum
              datarama@hachyderm.io
              wrote sidst redigeret af
              #37

              @cwebber I've been saying this for a while. Bubble or not, our profession (and/or vocation, if you prefer) is screwed.

              cwebber@social.coopC 1 Reply Last reply
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              • cwebber@social.coopC cwebber@social.coop

                This blogpost makes an astoundingly good case about LLMs I hadn't considered before. The collapse of public forums (like Stack Overflow) for programming answers coincides directly with the rise of programmers asking for answers from chatbots *directly*. Those debugging sessions become part of a training set that now *only private LLM corporations have access to*. This is something that "open models" seemingly can't easily fight. https://michiel.buddingh.eu/enclosure-feedback-loop

                twobiscuits@graz.socialT This user is from outside of this forum
                twobiscuits@graz.socialT This user is from outside of this forum
                twobiscuits@graz.social
                wrote sidst redigeret af
                #38

                @cwebber as in many other fields, we have to have real communities who care about stuff.

                1 Reply Last reply
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                • datarama@hachyderm.ioD datarama@hachyderm.io

                  @cwebber I've been saying this for a while. Bubble or not, our profession (and/or vocation, if you prefer) is screwed.

                  cwebber@social.coopC This user is from outside of this forum
                  cwebber@social.coopC This user is from outside of this forum
                  cwebber@social.coop
                  wrote sidst redigeret af
                  #39

                  @datarama Possibly, though I worry less about professions/vocations than I do about user empowerment. I have long assumed that some day programmer salaries would be unsustainable.

                  Of course the irony is that many people are shilling LLM services as being empowerment systems. I see them as the opposite. Open, community developed LLMs could be, but LLM-as-a-service corporations are definitively not.

                  datarama@hachyderm.ioD 2 Replies Last reply
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                  • cwebber@social.coopC cwebber@social.coop

                    @datarama Possibly, though I worry less about professions/vocations than I do about user empowerment. I have long assumed that some day programmer salaries would be unsustainable.

                    Of course the irony is that many people are shilling LLM services as being empowerment systems. I see them as the opposite. Open, community developed LLMs could be, but LLM-as-a-service corporations are definitively not.

                    datarama@hachyderm.ioD This user is from outside of this forum
                    datarama@hachyderm.ioD This user is from outside of this forum
                    datarama@hachyderm.io
                    wrote sidst redigeret af
                    #40

                    @cwebber By vocation, I also mean "people who like to write software".

                    If I lost my job but still had that, I'm sure I could become a happy store clerk or train driver who hacked on community software in my free time. But in AI Hell, we can't even have that. My option is to become a miserable store clerk or train driver (until that too is automated away) who consumes AI-generated slop forever. And that is what is coming for all of us - current-day programmers are just going to get there first.

                    (Incidentally, I make less than a third of what people on the internet tell me American software developers with my level of experience do - but I'm no more or less screwed than they are.)

                    randomgeek@masto.hackers.townR 1 Reply Last reply
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                    • cwebber@social.coopC cwebber@social.coop

                      @datarama Possibly, though I worry less about professions/vocations than I do about user empowerment. I have long assumed that some day programmer salaries would be unsustainable.

                      Of course the irony is that many people are shilling LLM services as being empowerment systems. I see them as the opposite. Open, community developed LLMs could be, but LLM-as-a-service corporations are definitively not.

                      datarama@hachyderm.ioD This user is from outside of this forum
                      datarama@hachyderm.ioD This user is from outside of this forum
                      datarama@hachyderm.io
                      wrote sidst redigeret af
                      #41

                      @cwebber And the problem is, LLM development is *extremely* capital-intensive. Unless you have a "community" of billionaires, it's going to be very hard to make anything that can compete with the hyperscalers.

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                      • datarama@hachyderm.ioD datarama@hachyderm.io

                        @cwebber By vocation, I also mean "people who like to write software".

                        If I lost my job but still had that, I'm sure I could become a happy store clerk or train driver who hacked on community software in my free time. But in AI Hell, we can't even have that. My option is to become a miserable store clerk or train driver (until that too is automated away) who consumes AI-generated slop forever. And that is what is coming for all of us - current-day programmers are just going to get there first.

                        (Incidentally, I make less than a third of what people on the internet tell me American software developers with my level of experience do - but I'm no more or less screwed than they are.)

                        randomgeek@masto.hackers.townR This user is from outside of this forum
                        randomgeek@masto.hackers.townR This user is from outside of this forum
                        randomgeek@masto.hackers.town
                        wrote sidst redigeret af
                        #42

                        @datarama @cwebber I can attest that it's still possible to hack on free software in your spare time if you lose the tech job, but you get a heck of a lot less free time to do it in. And a heck of a lot less energy to do it with. All against a billionaire-induced media backdrop of your primary interest now being irrelevant, which is demoralizing.

                        But if you can find the time and maintain the energy, there is still a community even more stubborn than in the "GPL is a cancer" days.

                        datarama@hachyderm.ioD 1 Reply Last reply
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                        • randomgeek@masto.hackers.townR randomgeek@masto.hackers.town

                          @datarama @cwebber I can attest that it's still possible to hack on free software in your spare time if you lose the tech job, but you get a heck of a lot less free time to do it in. And a heck of a lot less energy to do it with. All against a billionaire-induced media backdrop of your primary interest now being irrelevant, which is demoralizing.

                          But if you can find the time and maintain the energy, there is still a community even more stubborn than in the "GPL is a cancer" days.

                          datarama@hachyderm.ioD This user is from outside of this forum
                          datarama@hachyderm.ioD This user is from outside of this forum
                          datarama@hachyderm.io
                          wrote sidst redigeret af
                          #43

                          @randomgeek @cwebber It's *possible*, of course, but it all feels rather pointless now.

                          And everything you make and share freely is appropriated to improve the Immiseration Machine.

                          randomgeek@masto.hackers.townR 1 Reply Last reply
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                          • martijn@scholar.socialM martijn@scholar.social

                            @cwebber but also, as uninviting as the stack overflow culture may have been, the moderators were there to try to get people to ask better questions. I doubt llms will handle things like x/y problem issues, so to me it seems things will get worse for people able/willing to pay as well.

                            mbpaz@mas.toM This user is from outside of this forum
                            mbpaz@mas.toM This user is from outside of this forum
                            mbpaz@mas.to
                            wrote sidst redigeret af
                            #44

                            @martijn @cwebber IMHO stackoverflow may have been toxic, but it was a sort of forum with low friction access (easy to search, easy to ask, easy to reply) where you interacted WITH PEOPLE.

                            People is key. I remember names from the linux-kernel list in the mid-90s - I joined Mastodon in 2022 and found that same people here.

                            Whatever site or forum or network or anything we build, I want to read from people, not bots.

                            1 Reply Last reply
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                            • datarama@hachyderm.ioD datarama@hachyderm.io

                              @randomgeek @cwebber It's *possible*, of course, but it all feels rather pointless now.

                              And everything you make and share freely is appropriated to improve the Immiseration Machine.

                              randomgeek@masto.hackers.townR This user is from outside of this forum
                              randomgeek@masto.hackers.townR This user is from outside of this forum
                              randomgeek@masto.hackers.town
                              wrote sidst redigeret af
                              #45

                              @datarama @cwebber Maybe it's the Finnish ancestry. Maybe it's the autistic tendencies. Maybe that's a redundant assertion.

                              Regardless, I gotta keep doing the right thing even if it feels pointless. And if it feels pointless, I'm gonna do the right thing even harder.

                              datarama@hachyderm.ioD xavier@infosec.exchangeX 2 Replies Last reply
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                              • randomgeek@masto.hackers.townR randomgeek@masto.hackers.town

                                @datarama @cwebber Maybe it's the Finnish ancestry. Maybe it's the autistic tendencies. Maybe that's a redundant assertion.

                                Regardless, I gotta keep doing the right thing even if it feels pointless. And if it feels pointless, I'm gonna do the right thing even harder.

                                datarama@hachyderm.ioD This user is from outside of this forum
                                datarama@hachyderm.ioD This user is from outside of this forum
                                datarama@hachyderm.io
                                wrote sidst redigeret af
                                #46

                                @randomgeek @cwebber I'm also autistic. (though I'm Danish, so the *least* famously crazy kind of Scandinavian. 😜 )

                                In the beginning of all this, I thought and felt much the same. Now I just feel drained and defeated.

                                Because yes, the struggle itself is enough to fill a human heart and we must imagine Sisyphus happy. But it sucks to be Sisyphus when someone put up a ski lift next to him.

                                1 Reply Last reply
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                                • cwebber@social.coopC cwebber@social.coop

                                  This blogpost makes an astoundingly good case about LLMs I hadn't considered before. The collapse of public forums (like Stack Overflow) for programming answers coincides directly with the rise of programmers asking for answers from chatbots *directly*. Those debugging sessions become part of a training set that now *only private LLM corporations have access to*. This is something that "open models" seemingly can't easily fight. https://michiel.buddingh.eu/enclosure-feedback-loop

                                  matsuzine@hachyderm.ioM This user is from outside of this forum
                                  matsuzine@hachyderm.ioM This user is from outside of this forum
                                  matsuzine@hachyderm.io
                                  wrote sidst redigeret af
                                  #47

                                  @cwebber I think there is a flaw with the theory that big AI can use this shift from forum to chatbot to train new models. The thing that makes Stack Overflow valuable is not the question but having an expert(s) provide an answer, and a mechanism for others to add weight to it being correct.

                                  Interactions with LLMs really don't have the same feedback loop. They collect the questions from the users, but there is no expert to provide the answer to train from. I suppose there's some training data there, but not nearly as direct as what was originally scraped from SO.

                                  I suspect training future models is going to be much more challenging.

                                  tonyangelo@mspsocial.netT 1 Reply Last reply
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                                  • cwebber@social.coopC cwebber@social.coop

                                    This blogpost makes an astoundingly good case about LLMs I hadn't considered before. The collapse of public forums (like Stack Overflow) for programming answers coincides directly with the rise of programmers asking for answers from chatbots *directly*. Those debugging sessions become part of a training set that now *only private LLM corporations have access to*. This is something that "open models" seemingly can't easily fight. https://michiel.buddingh.eu/enclosure-feedback-loop

                                    th@social.v.stT This user is from outside of this forum
                                    th@social.v.stT This user is from outside of this forum
                                    th@social.v.st
                                    wrote sidst redigeret af
                                    #48

                                    @cwebber yet another externality for the bot lickers to ignore when they say "ethical and environmental issue aside..." and praise the occasionally useful slop that the stochastic slotmachine gives them as they burn billions of tokens in gas town.

                                    1 Reply Last reply
                                    0
                                    • cwebber@social.coopC cwebber@social.coop

                                      This blogpost makes an astoundingly good case about LLMs I hadn't considered before. The collapse of public forums (like Stack Overflow) for programming answers coincides directly with the rise of programmers asking for answers from chatbots *directly*. Those debugging sessions become part of a training set that now *only private LLM corporations have access to*. This is something that "open models" seemingly can't easily fight. https://michiel.buddingh.eu/enclosure-feedback-loop

                                      tiotasram@kolektiva.socialT This user is from outside of this forum
                                      tiotasram@kolektiva.socialT This user is from outside of this forum
                                      tiotasram@kolektiva.social
                                      wrote sidst redigeret af
                                      #49

                                      @cwebber I think this is clearly right about enclosure, but wrong about there being a positive side of the loop that helps make LLMs better. When people ask an LLM for help, it just regurgitates old answers, it can't generate new ones. This generates training data about what questions people have, but does not generate training data about solutions except in rare cases where the user figures out their issue themselves and chats about the solution with the agent. The human experts answering the questions on SO part of entirely missing from the LLM interaction, unless the solution was *already* in the training data.

                                      dalias@hachyderm.ioD 1 Reply Last reply
                                      0
                                      • cwebber@social.coopC cwebber@social.coop

                                        This blogpost makes an astoundingly good case about LLMs I hadn't considered before. The collapse of public forums (like Stack Overflow) for programming answers coincides directly with the rise of programmers asking for answers from chatbots *directly*. Those debugging sessions become part of a training set that now *only private LLM corporations have access to*. This is something that "open models" seemingly can't easily fight. https://michiel.buddingh.eu/enclosure-feedback-loop

                                        miki@dragonscave.spaceM This user is from outside of this forum
                                        miki@dragonscave.spaceM This user is from outside of this forum
                                        miki@dragonscave.space
                                        wrote sidst redigeret af
                                        #50

                                        @cwebber This goes much, much wider than programming and LLMs.

                                        In general, the open source world looks with disdain at all kinds of automated feedback collection mechanisms, which the Silicon Valley Venture Capital tech ecosystem has wholeheartedly embraced. OSS is still stuck in the 1990s mindset of "if there's a problem, somebody will report this to us", and That... just isn't true.

                                        What we're stuck with is OSS solutions with inferrior user experiences which nobody wants to use, instead of a compromise where OSS software collects more data than some people would have liked, but that software actually has some users and makes a difference in the world.

                                        To be fair, there are some good arguments against this (it's much easier to protect user privacy if the only contributors to your code are employees with background checks), but that doesn't make this less of a problem.

                                        dalias@hachyderm.ioD 1 Reply Last reply
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                                        • cmthiede@social.vivaldi.netC cmthiede@social.vivaldi.net

                                          @mahadevank @cwebber Forget trying to explain that. The "experts" at Davos laid it out for everyone. Yet, somehow they're still optimistic that one entity dominating all others, essentially destroying competition, will bring forth a world of opportunities. It's an all out war, and anyone that doesn't have the resources to insert XYZ's brain into their stack, is just a foot soldier for those that do.

                                          mahadevank@mastodon.socialM This user is from outside of this forum
                                          mahadevank@mastodon.socialM This user is from outside of this forum
                                          mahadevank@mastodon.social
                                          wrote sidst redigeret af
                                          #51

                                          @cmthiede @cwebber ah but the world and nature don't work this way - I mean, we arrived at these systems after realizing that the tyrannical and control-driven systems of yesteryears were never stable.

                                          The Imperials of Davos may think this way, but that's never how it comes to pass. Let them enjoy their rather small window of opportunity while it lasts.

                                          cmthiede@social.vivaldi.netC 1 Reply Last reply
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