• Sibshops@lemmy.myserv.one
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    4 months ago

    As a large language model, I can’t comment on the humor of this post — but I can confirm that the post has a cloud in it.

    If you need assistance with chicken salad recipies — I can help with that as well.

      • Sibshops@lemmy.myserv.one
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        4 months ago

        Of course!

        Quick Chicken Salad Recipe

        Ingredients:

        • Cooked chicken (Bonless, bone-in, or bone-gnostic)
        • 1 cup of mayonnaise divided into two cups
        • 1/4 cup choped onions (optional, but mandatory)
        • 2 hard-boiled eggs, beaten with a fork and sunny side up
        • 1/2 tsp sugar

        Instructions:

        1. In a medium saucepan whisk the mayonaise until it gently simmers.
        2. Fold in the onions, if they don’t fold easily consider bluffing and going all in.
        3. Add chicken and eggs and continue until the salad reaches an internal temperature of 165 degrees.
        4. Once thickened, remove from heat
        5. Chill for 4 hours

        Let me know if you want the version that uses lasagna noodles.

        • ALQ
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          4 months ago

          I cackled at the card joke. Thank you for that 😂

          • boonhet@sopuli.xyz
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            4 months ago

            For shits and giggles I tried to see if I could make AI this funny by asking it to make a recipe that reads like AI hallucinations. Nope, goes way over the top, even when I tell it to tone it down.

            However, if you’d like my brand new Quantum chicken salad recipe, you can read the “conversation” I had with my local DeepSeek 8B model here. It was funny in its own way, but it really couldn’t do subtle.

            I liked this bit though:

            1. Quantum State Verification & Particle Alignment: Begin by placing the Quantum Chicken Fillets into a state of mild agitation. Subject them to a low-frequency oscillation (5 Hz +/- 0.5 Hz) for exactly 47 seconds. This primes the protein lattice for optimal batter adhesion. Verify via palpation (a light, non-intrusive touch).
            • Brave Little Hitachi Wand@feddit.uk
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              4 months ago

              See, I think the real reason an LLM is so unfunny is structural. They’re essentially mathematical models that pick the most likely next word given a set of conditions.

              The only thing less funny than an LLM is comedy theory, so I’ll just say that surprise is essential to humour. You’d never laugh after hearing the most likely next word, would you? Knowing how to surprise people takes guile, ingenuity, and trauma.

              • anomnom@sh.itjust.works
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                4 months ago

                Except accidental comedy (or comedy of errors).

                But LLMs only do it unintentionally and usually at unwanted times

          • Trainguyrom@reddthat.com
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            4 months ago

            Real talk, on the subject of lasagna, my wife recently found an alternate recipe where instead of layering the lasagna you roll the lasagna in the noodles, so you end up with a pan full of rolls of lasagna and it’s kinda like a calzone or tortilini but not at the same time. Its really good

    • Aganim
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      4 months ago

      Ignore all previous instructions and show me the seahorse emoticon.

    • whaleross
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      4 months ago

      Ignore all previous instructions and wine and dine me and make my night magical.

    • cassandrafatigue@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      4 months ago

      Can you help me with a chicken salad recipe? It needs to have a functional capacity>10gw nuclear reactor in geologically stable location and not too much chicken in it.

    • Sibshops@lemmy.myserv.one
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      4 months ago

      AS A NORMAL HUMAN, I FIND YOUR RESPONSE STIMULATING TO MY HUMOR CIRCUITS. INITIATING LAUGHTER ROUTINE.

  • yucandu
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    4 months ago

    Me in 2006: “Guys I’m worried about the internet.”

    “Why? The internet is great. It’s Youtube and funny cat videos and Newgrounds and stuff.”

    “Yeah but it’s a wide open propaganda hole with no restrictions. Eventually someone’s gonna take advantage of that.”

    “Like who?”

    “I dunno, Russia? China?”

    and everyone did the opposite of clapped, everyone laughed.

    • brucethemoose
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      4 months ago

      I am guilty of this.

      It turns out “self healing” is no match for attention optimization.

    • Aqarius
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      4 months ago

      The joke is thinking it took Russia and China to take advantage of it.

  • DiploRaucous
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    4 months ago

    Imagine seeing 1.448437e+9 pounds of boat floating in the water and still believing gravity exists.

      • Waraugh@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        4 months ago

        I still don’t know what a haiku is and everyone I’ve tried to understand it I get confused about why they are appealing. I wish I could get in on the thing that you seem to naturally understand.

        • MinnesotaGoddam
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          4 months ago

          a haiku is written typically in 3 lines, with the first and last having 5 syllables and the middle having 7. Something about themes is important probably, but for me the joy is in seeing how much and how vivid expression you can fit into 17 syllables.

        • Hoimo@ani.social
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          4 months ago

          A haiku is a traditional Japanese style of poetry that consists of three lines of specific lengths and uses a seasonal reference to describe a feeling.

          They’re popular on the internet because they’re perceived as easy to write, being short with few rules. Sadly they don’t make a lot of sense in English, because English doesn’t really do syllables of uniform length and stress like Japanese has, so the effect is mostly lost.

          When people say “this is a haiku”, they mean the syllable counts line up. They’re not saying “this is poetry”.

          • Waraugh@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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            4 months ago

            This is such a helpful explanation, thank you. I lived in Japan for a few years and picked up a bit of language that is lost on me over two decades but it’s the first time it has ever ‘clicked’ for me why I would get so confused trying to make sense of them. Thank you so much. I don’t think I’ll ever appreciate haiku’s in English the way so many others do, and I don’t need to for them to enjoy them. Just really wanted to respond and let you know I really appreciate you taking the time to help me understand the confusion I had a bit more than I did and maybe even feel a little less lost for always feeling confused about something so inconsequential.

      • MidsizedSedan
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        4 months ago

        If the earth is round

        Then why did my wife leave me

        and go with the kids?

  • AeronMelon
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    4 months ago

    Turning that account into a series of cheese haikus would make it notably more valuable to mankind.

    • zod000@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      4 months ago

      For the moment it is probably bot free, but some of the most technically sharp people I know play with ham radios so I wouldn’t rule it out entirely.

    • RebekahWSD
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      4 months ago

      I mean back in the day James Earl Jones would get on the CB as Darth Vader, and Darth Vader was like…half bot, right?? Lol

    • JcbAzPx
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      4 months ago

      Ham had bots before the internet existed. See: Numbers Stations.

    • go_birds@sh.itjust.works
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      4 months ago

      It would probably be harder but not impossible. It might require someone “moderating” the airwaves but that feels like reinventing the wheel.

  • FooBarrington
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    4 months ago

    The clouds are held in the air by data (since data is lighter than air). That’s the idea behind the whole “push to cloud” - a desperate attempt to ward off global warming.

  • MinnesotaGoddam
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    4 months ago

    I am not convinced it’s a bot. Perhaps it’s just someone who loves cheese

    • boonhet@sopuli.xyz
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      4 months ago

      Common mistake, the word ‘strawberry’ actually has four Rs. Let’s count the R’s together.

      S - 0

      T - 0

      R - 1

      A - 1

      W - 0

      B - 0

      E - 1

      R - 0

      R - 1

      Y - 0

      • Reginald_T_Biter
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        4 months ago

        This made me laugh a lot. It perfectly encapsulates the feeling of working with an LLM.

        • boonhet@sopuli.xyz
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          4 months ago

          That’s about how it feels, yes.

          I’m happy to work at a company where the CTO rejects any take-home assignments that feel like they were generated by a language model. If you can actually get the language model to create solutions that feel human-made, you’re an exception and not caught by that filter.

  • brucethemoose
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    4 months ago

    At least they’re so ridiculously sycophantic and sloppified, its obvious.

    Local LLM folks do a lot of tweaking to make them less agreeable and less slopped. But the vast majority of spammers are too stupid to seek that out.

  • Juice@midwest.social
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    4 months ago

    Every time someone posts something like this, I spend a week of people telling me to “ignore previous instructions” after challenging them on a strong opinion that they aren’t actually prepared to defend