• t3rmit3@beehaw.org
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    15 days ago

    Santa Clara County alone has 24 million property records, but the study team focused mostly on 5.2 million records from the period 1902 to 1980. The artificial intelligence model completed its review of those records in six days for $258, according to the Stanford study. A manual review would have taken five years at a cost of more than $1.4 million, the study estimated.

    This is an awesome use of an LLM. Talk about the cost savings of automation, especially when the alternative was the reviews just not getting done.

    • Killer_Tree@beehaw.org
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      15 days ago

      Specialized LLMs trained for specific tasks can be immensely beneficial! I’m glad to see some of that happening instead of “Company XYZ is now needlessly adding AI to it’s products because buzzwords!”

      • OmnipotentEntity@beehaw.org
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        14 days ago

        LLMs are bad for the uses they’ve been recently pushed for, yes. But this is legitimately a very good use of them. This is natural language processing, within a narrow scope with a specific intention. This is exactly what it can be good at. Even if does have a high false negative rate, that’s still thousands and thousands of true positive cases that were addressed quickly and cheaply, and that a human auditor no longer needs to touch.

          • t3rmit3@beehaw.org
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            14 days ago

            I think you may have misunderstood the purpose of this tool.

            It doesn’t read the deeds, make a decision, and submit them for termination all on its own. It reads them, identifies racial covenants based on patterns of language (which is exactly what LLMs are very good at), and then flags them for a human to review.

            This tool is not replacing jobs, because the whole point is that these reviews were never going to get the budget and manpower to be done manually, and instead would have simply remained on the books.

            I get being disdainful or even angry about LLMs in our unregulated-capitalism anti-worker hellhole because of the way that most companies are using them, but tools aren’t themselves good or bad, they’re just tools. And using a tool to identify racial covenants in legal documents that otherwise would go un-remediated, seems like a pretty good use to me.

            • knightly the Sneptaur@pawb.social
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              14 days ago

              So, what? They’re going to pay a human to OK the output and the whole lot of them never even gets seen?

              Say 12 minutes per covenant, that’s 1 million work hours that humans could get paid for. Pay them $50 an hour and it’s $50 million. That’s nothing, less than 36 hours worth of the $12.5 Billion in weapons shipments we’ve sent to Israel in the last year. We could pay for projects like this with the rounding errors on the budget for blowing up foreign kids, and the people we pay to do it could afford to put their kids through college.

              Instead, we get a project to train a robotic bigotry filter for real estate legalese and 50 more cruise missiles from the savings.

              • t3rmit3@beehaw.org
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                14 days ago

                I think you are confused about the delineation between local and federal governments. It’s not all one giant pool of tax money. None of Santa Clara County’s budget goes to missiles.

                Also, this feels like you are too capitalism-pilled, and rather than just spending the $240 to do this work, and using the remaining $49,999,760 to just fund free college or UBI programs, you’re like, “how about we pay these people to do the most mind-numbingly, soul-crushingly boring work there is, reading old legal documents?”

                You know what would actually happen if you did that? People would seriously read through them for 1 day, and then they’d be like, “clear”, “clear”, “clear” without looking at half of them. It’s not like you’re gonna find and fund another group to review the first group’s work, after all. So you’d still be where we are now, but you also wasted x* peoples’ time that they could have been enjoying doing literally anything else.

                • knightly the Sneptaur@pawb.social
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                  14 days ago

                  I think you are confused about the delineation between local and federal governments.

                  I am not, I simply don’t believe the delineation is relevant since taxpayers fund both the state and federal budgets.

                  Also, this feels like you are too capitalism-pilled

                  This is me being “reasonable” and working within the constraints of the system. If we aren’t going to have free universal college et al then we can at least trade some of the bloated military budget for a public works program.

                  People would seriously read through them for 1 day, and then they’d be like, “clear”, “clear”, “clear” without looking at half of them.

                  Sounds to me like a 50% improvement over zero human eyes.

                  It’s not like you’re gonna find and fund another group to review the first group’s work, after all.

                  Why not? We could hire three teams to do it simultaneously in every state in the country and the cost would still be a tiny fraction of how much was wasted on the F-35 program.

                  • howrar@lemmy.ca
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                    14 days ago

                    Sounds to me like a 50% improvement over zero human eyes.

                    It certainly would be. Thankfully, there’s many more than zero human eyes involved in this.

          • GetOffMyLan@programming.dev
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            14 days ago

            One of LLMs main strengths over traditional text analysis tools is the ability to “understand” context.

            They are bad at generating factual responses. They are amazing at analysing text.

            • knightly the Sneptaur@pawb.social
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              14 days ago

              LLMs neither understand nor analyze text. They are statistical models of the text they were trained on. A map of language.

              And, like any map, they should not be confused for the territory they represent.

              If you admit that they have issues with facts, why would you assume that the randomly generated facts their “analysis” produces must be accurate?

              • GetOffMyLan@programming.dev
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                14 days ago

                I mean they literally do analyze text. They’re great at it. Give it some text and it will analyze it really well. I do it with code at work all the time.

                Because they are two completely different tasks. Asking them to recall information from their training is a very bad use. Asking them to analyze information passed into them is what they are great at.

                Give it a sample of code and it will very accurately analyse and explain it. Ask it to generate code and the results are wildly varied in accuracy.

                I’m not assuming anything you can literally go and use one right now and see.

                • apotheotic (she/her)@beehaw.org
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                  14 days ago

                  The person you’re replying to is correct though. They do not understand, they do not analyse. They generate (roughly) the most statistically likely answer to your prompt, which may very well end up being text representing an accurate analysis. They might even be incredibly reliable at doing so. But this person is just pushing back against the idea of these models actually understanding or analysing. Its slightly pedantic, sure, but its important to distinguish in the world of machine intelligence.

                  • GetOffMyLan@programming.dev
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                    14 days ago

                    I literally quoted the word for that exact reason. It just gets really tiring when you talk about AIs and someone always has to make this point. We all know they don’t think or understand in the same way we do. No one gains anything by it being pointed out constantly.

      • howrar@lemmy.ca
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        14 days ago

        Considering that it’s a language task, LLMs exist, and the cost, it’s a reasonable assumption. It’d be pretty silly to analyse a bag of words when you have tools you can use with minimal work with much better results. Even sillier to spend over $200 for something that can be run on a decade old machine in a few hours.