I see mixed emotions here. I understand both. On one hand it's exciting and fascinating. On the other it's concerning. One concern I haven't seen mentioned is the possibility that, as these models become larger and more powerful, their capability to solve frontier math problems will also grow. Does there become a point where humans are no longer the driver of innovation and research in this world, and instead are relegated to become stewards of the AI models whose purpose is to push the boundaries of mathematics, theoretical physics and other academic disciplines?
For those of us who care about the answers to these questions, rather than who gets credit for doing it, we will welcome any faster means of solving these problems.
Reminds me of a time I was running a proof-of-concept for a new networking tool at a customer site, and about two minutes after we got it running their entire network went down. We were in a sandboxed area so there was no way our product could of caused a network wide outage, but in my head I'm thinking: "there's no way, right. . . .RIGHT?!?!".
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