TheGaggle
Politics • Culture • News
Our community is made up of those who value the freedom of speech, the right to debate and the promise of open, honest conversations.

We don't agree on everything but we never silence our followers and value every opinion on our channel.
Interested? Want to learn more about the community?

You have noticed it. ChatGPT feels dumber than it used to. Your prompts that worked six months ago produce worse results now. The writing sounds flatter. The ideas sound safer. The internet itself feels like it is shrinking. Every article reads the same. Every email sounds the same. Every answer sounds like it was written by the same voice.

You thought it was you. It is not you.

Researchers at Oxford and Cambridge published a paper in Nature proving what is happening. They call it Model Collapse.

Here is the mechanism in one sentence. AI trained on AI-generated data gets dumber every generation until it forgets what real human data looked like.

The internet is filling with AI-generated content. Blog posts. Articles. Reviews. Comments. Social media. AI companies scrape the internet to train the next generation of models. Which means the next generation of AI is being trained on the output of the current generation.

Each cycle loses information. Not randomly. It loses the rarest, most unusual, most creative parts first. The researchers call these the "tails of the distribution." The weird ideas. The unexpected perspectives. The things that made the internet feel human. Those disappear first.

What remains is the average. The safe. The expected. The bland.

Then the next generation trains on that. And loses more. And the next generation trains on that. And loses more. The researchers proved this is not a slow decline. Major degradation happens within just a few iterations. Even when some of the original human data is preserved.

They tested it on large language models. On image generators. On statistical models. The pattern was the same every time. The output converges toward a narrow, flattened version of reality that looks nothing like the original data.

The lead researcher put it plainly. "Large language models are like fire. A useful tool. But one that pollutes the environment."

The pollution is invisible. You cannot see which sentence on the internet was written by a human and which was written by AI. Neither can the AI that is about to train on it. And once the tails are gone, they do not come back. The damage is irreversible.

This is not a prediction anymore. It is a diagnosis.

The internet you grew up on was built by humans writing things no algorithm would have written. Strange, personal, imperfect, alive. That internet is being diluted. One generation of AI at a time. And the models trained on what remains are learning a smaller and smaller version of the world.

Model Collapse is not a technical problem. It is a cultural one. The thing that made the internet worth reading is the thing that disappears first. https://x.com/heynavtoor/status/2064797676475187520?s=20

Interested? Want to learn more about the community?
What else you may like…
Videos
Posts
Articles
Live Chat
Monday Night At The Movies: "Night Train" (1959)

Join Gagglers for "Night Train"!
The screening starts at 3 p.m. ET sharp.
Share all of your thoughts, comments and criticisms on the Live Chat.

See you at 3 p.m. ET

01:37:10
TG 2134: Zelensky Pens Open Letter To Putin; Lavrov Sounds Different Note From Kremlin's

George Szamuely and Peter Lavelle discuss Ukraine President Zelensky's open letter to Russian President Putin, Putin's response to it and Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov's increasingly harsh tone toward the Trump administration--a striking contrast to that of the complaisant Kremlin.

01:09:45
TG 2133: World Renders Judgment On Today's Germany In U.N. Vote

George Szamuely and Peter Lavelle discuss Germany's failure to win a seat on the U.N. Security Council, and explain its global significance.

00:37:23
46 minutes ago

Yet, somehow, the Dnieper bridges in Ukraine are protected by some kind of voodoo magic, man

According to information circulating online, a bridge in Armyansk at the northern entrance to Crimea was struck.

The Armyansk Bridge, which crosses the North Crimean Canal, reportedly sustained damage, while several trucks caught fire following the attack. The canal has remained largely dry since the destruction of the Kakhovka Dam.

The crossing is located on one of the key routes linking Crimea with occupied Kherson Oblast. https://x.com/bayraktar_1love/status/2064862574370234613?s=20

52 minutes ago

Europe is preparing its public for something it has avoided for years.

A real trade war with China.

Not complaints. Not carefully worded statements. An honest-to-goodness trade war.

Brussels has already held closed-door meetings. The "Made in Europe" framework has launched. Officials are publicly saying the relationship is no longer sustainable. Privately they are accepting the obvious: if Europe moves, China retaliates.

This is not about protectionism. It is about survival.

Europe's industries are under pressure. The old assumption that cheap Chinese goods were always a benefit is breaking down.

China is not exporting because it is strong. China is exporting because it is broken.

Households not spending. Property still falling. Credit collapsing. Investment crashing.

China's factories produce more than its economy can absorb. So the excess goes outward. The world becomes the release valve.

China faces an impossible choice. Cut production and crush the domestic economy further. Or keep ...

Iran had 50 years to prepare for this war, yet it still isn't ready. It lacks air defense systems and doesn't even have bomb shelters," I told
@GuyShone
, Editor-in-Chief of
@Anewz_tv
, in an interview.
https://x.com/nikola_mikovic/status/2064809507784417593?s=20

January 21, 2023
More Leftie Than Thou
"Jacobin" Magazine Celebrates A Strike Against Ol' Blue Eyes

Here at "The Gaggle" we have very little time for the "more Leftie than thou" school of thought--that's the approach to life according to which the only thing that matters is whether you take the right position on every issue under the sun from Abortion to Zelensky. No one in the world meets the exacting standards of this school of thought; any Leftie leader anywhere is always selling out to the bankers and the capitalists. The perfect exemplar of this is the unreadable Jacobin magazine. 

The other day I came across this article from 2021. It's a celebration of trade union power. And not simply trade union power, but the use of trade union power to secure political goals. Of course (and this is always the case with the "more Leftie than thou" crowd), this glorious, never-to-be-forgotten moment on the history of organized labor took place many years ago--in the summer of 1974 to be exact. Yes, almost half a century has gone by since that thrilling moment when the working-class movement of Australia mobilized and prepared to seize the means of production, distribution and exchange. 

Well, not quite. Organized labor went into action against...Ol' Blue Eyes, the Chairman of the Board, the Voice; yes, Frank Sinatra. Why? What had Sinatra done? Sinatra was certainly very rich, and he owned a variety of properties and businesses. But if the Australian trade union movement were, understandably, searching for the bright, incandescent spark that would finally awaken the working class from its slumber there were surely richer, greedier, more dishonest, more decadent, above all more Australian individuals it could have discovered. Australia was never short of them. Rupert Murdoch immediately springs to mind. Why Sinatra?

 

Only for Supporters
To read the rest of this article and access other paid content, you must be a supporter
Read full Article
See More
Available on mobile and TV devices
google store google store app store app store
google store google store app tv store app tv store amazon store amazon store roku store roku store
Powered by Locals