PonyOfWar

joined 2 years ago
[–] PonyOfWar@pawb.social 10 points 2 years ago

I imagine things got disrupted somewhat by the war in their home country.

[–] PonyOfWar@pawb.social 13 points 2 years ago

Nice, looking forward to another high-profile VR game. I hope it has a decent length.

[–] PonyOfWar@pawb.social 9 points 2 years ago* (last edited 2 years ago)

First up, go to one of the available help centers and register for welfare. This will give me a monthly income that's enough to cover most of my daily needs. Housing will be more complicated. The state would cover my rent but I'd first need to find a suitable flat in the first place. If I'm lucky, there is social housing available. If not, I'd have to sleep on the street or in shelters for a while. No idea how I'd handle that. Once I have a roof over my head, I can start looking for a job.

[–] PonyOfWar@pawb.social 2 points 2 years ago (1 children)

First off, I don’t think depression is a good measure of intelligence.

Exactly. Which is why we shouldn't judge an AIs intelligence based on whether it can develop depression. Sure, it's feasible it could develop it through some other mechanism. But there's no reason to assume it would, in absence of the factors that cause depressions in humans.

[–] PonyOfWar@pawb.social 1 points 2 years ago (3 children)

That's exactly my point though, as OP stated we could detect if an AI was truly intelligent if it developed depression. Without hormones or something similar, there's no reason to believe it ever would develop those on its own. The fact that you could artificially give it depressions is besides the point.

[–] PonyOfWar@pawb.social 11 points 2 years ago

Give it the right dataset and you could easily create a depressed sounding LLM to rival Marvin the paranoid android.

[–] PonyOfWar@pawb.social 3 points 2 years ago (7 children)

Not sure about that. A LLM could show symptoms of depression by mimicking depressed texts it was fed. A computer with a true consciousness might never get depression, because it has none of the hormones influencing our brain.

[–] PonyOfWar@pawb.social 125 points 2 years ago (20 children)

The word "AI" has been used for way longer than the current LLM trend, even for fairly trivial things like enemy AI in video games. How would you even define a computer "thinking on its own"?

[–] PonyOfWar@pawb.social 29 points 2 years ago (4 children)

Bei uns (ländliche Gegend) gibt es erst nächsten Samstag eine Demo. Habe aber vor hinzugehen.

[–] PonyOfWar@pawb.social 4 points 2 years ago

But even those are not that similar. Tail length, head size, leg length, distance between front legs, ears etc. I have my doubts in this mysterious anonymous "expert". I may not be a senior character designer, but I also work in 3d content production. I don't agree with their claims.

[–] PonyOfWar@pawb.social 4 points 2 years ago

Yeah. It would probably have been more work to take a Pokemon model and modify it to this extent compared to making it from scratch. Some of the designs in Palworld definitely took heavy Pokemon inspirations to the point of almost being a rip-off, but so far the evidence for actual asset theft is not convincing at all.

[–] PonyOfWar@pawb.social 9 points 2 years ago* (last edited 2 years ago) (1 children)

Thank you. Have to say, I'm not convinced after watching these. Aside from similar body types, there are differences everywhere. Like in the last video, the Palworld model has a concave back, thinner differently shaped legs and a smaller head. It's a cartoony quadruped of similar but not identical proportions and that's about it. To prove ripped models, you'd have to show significant sections where the vertices are identical.

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