Monday, July 6

Tag: Reddit

Why are more and more people switching to uncensored or local models?
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Why are more and more people switching to uncensored or local models?

A clear trend is happening lately, a lot of users are moving away from heavily restricted models like chatgpt and claude toward uncensored or local models. Common reasons seem to be fewer refusals, better creative freedom, and privacy concerns. Has anyone else made the switch or considered it? submitted by /u/NoFilterGPT [link] [comments]
A war between Anthropic and Alibaba?
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A war between Anthropic and Alibaba?

Anthropic has accused Alibaba of creating tens of thousands of fake Claude accounts to scrape Claude of its intellectual property via distillation attacks. Alibaba retaliates by telling their official (not contracted) employees to stop using Claude Code. I'm noticing from Reddit posts and comments that Claude has gotten much more wary of what it determines as strange prompting requests? There is an article indicating that Fable 5 has been "hardened" against distillation attacks, but it's locking out some legitimate users and refusing on innocuous requests. Seems like a lot of users are caught in the middle? submitted by /u/RazzmatazzAccurate82 [link] [comments]
What’s one thing AI does surprisingly well that you didn’t expect?
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What’s one thing AI does surprisingly well that you didn’t expect?

When ChatGPT first came out, I assumed I'd mostly use it to answer random questions. That lasted about a week. Now the thing I use it for the most is taking messy thoughts and turning them into something I can actually work with. Whether it's rewriting an email, organizing notes, or helping me think through an idea, that's become the real value for me. Ironically, I use AI less for getting answers and more for helping me think more clearly. What about you? What's one use case you genuinely didn't expect to become part of your routine? submitted by /u/Sandesh_jagtap [link] [comments]
Survey: 63% of Americans are uncomfortable letting AI help them choose who to vote for, and 80% are worried AI bots are answering political surveys. Is the discomfort about AI, or about trust?
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Survey: 63% of Americans are uncomfortable letting AI help them choose who to vote for, and 80% are worried AI bots are answering political surveys. Is the discomfort about AI, or about trust?

Saw a national survey from March on how people feel about AI in politics, and two numbers stuck with me. 63% said they'd be uncomfortable using an AI chatbot to help decide who to vote for, even though plenty of people are fine using chatbots to fact-check or follow issues. 80% said they're worried that AI bots, not real people, are answering the surveys that feed into policy and business decisions. It reads less like fear of the tech and more like people drawing a hard line at AI touching the actual decision. Where do folks here think that line should be? Source: https://data.verasight.io/ai/adults-views-on-ai-in-elections submitted by /u/Emergency-Paper6793 [link] [comments]
Meta Reportedly Strikes $6.5 Billion Deal with Samsung Foundry for 2nm AI Chips
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Meta Reportedly Strikes $6.5 Billion Deal with Samsung Foundry for 2nm AI Chips

Meta Platforms is reportedly investing $6.5 billion with Samsung Foundry to produce its third-generation MTIA (Meta Training and Inference Accelerator) chips using a 2nm process. This strategic move signifies a shift from TSMC and aims to reduce reliance on NVIDIA GPUs, lower supply chain risks, and support Meta's ambitious goal of 5 gigawatts of computing capacity by 2030 for its AI and cloud initiatives. The deal is expected to bolster Meta's competitive position in the rapidly evolving AI and cloud computing markets. Context Meta has been increasingly focused on artificial intelligence and cloud services, necessitating advanced computing power. The MTIA chips represent Meta's third generation of in-house processors, designed to optimize performance for AI workloads. The shift to Samsung...
This week in AI: GPT-5.6, Gemini 3.5 Flash, Claude Science, and a Qwen price war — inference cost is collapsing across every tier at once
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This week in AI: GPT-5.6, Gemini 3.5 Flash, Claude Science, and a Qwen price war — inference cost is collapsing across every tier at once

Lot dropped this week and there's a pretty clear through-line, so figured I'd pull it together. Model releases: - OpenAI launched GPT-5.6 (Sol/Terra/Luna). The bit worth noting isn't the flagship — it's Terra, reportedly matching GPT-5.5 quality at ~2x cheaper, with Luna aimed at the low-cost end. - Google shipped Gemini 3.5 Flash (beats 3.1 Pro on several benchmarks), plus Nano Banana 2 Lite (images ~$0.034/1K-res) and Gemini Omni Flash (video ~$0.10/sec via API). - xAI made Grok 3 GA and Grok 4.1 live for everyone. Grok 5 still hasn't shipped, which is its own story at this point. Vertical / enterprise: - Anthropic launched Claude Science for pharma and lab research. Separately, the US govt lifted the export restrictions on Fable 5 / Mythos 5 that it had imposed only weeks earlier. - Mis...
AI cancel culture
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AI cancel culture

My reddit feed has been getting filled with a ton of AI generated content. A notable one is r/ModMuse. Its a girl posing for selfies in different outfits. It came up again today. Tons of posts from guys. One said "You're really pretty." I responded: "Don't get too excited. I'm pretty sure she's AI generated..." I then got a response that read..."Removed: Please don't post unverified fake/ AI-generated accusations. I am a bot. This action was performed automatically." And then a follow-on message saying I'm permanently banned from the sub. I found this a little unnerving. AI agents and automated scripts are starting to show up everywhere. If AI is able to generate content on its own and control the conversation by silencing dissenters, it seems a dangerous precedent. The content in this sit...
AI didn’t replace the work for me. It moved the stress to a different place.
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AI didn’t replace the work for me. It moved the stress to a different place.

I don’t feel like AI has made work “effortless.” It has mostly changed which part of the work feels hard. Before, the hard part was usually getting a first version done. Writing the first draft, building the first page, outlining the first plan, or turning a rough idea into something real enough to look at. Now that part is much faster. But I notice the stress moved somewhere else. Now I spend more energy asking: is this actually correct? did it miss the weird edge case? does this sound plausible but wrong? can I trust this enough to ship it? did it quietly make the thing more complicated? am I reviewing carefully, or just accepting because it looks good? That feels like the real shift to me. AI reduces the blank-page pain, but it increases the judgment burden. The person using the AI st...
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