text generator approves drugs
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What happens when people realise and it immediately become the most popular drug on the market?
Win-win?
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Likely those new models are varients trained specifically on the exact material needed to perform those tasks, essentially passing the bar exam as if it were open book.
Reminds me of a video that starts with the fact you can't convince image generating AI to draw a wine glass filled to the brim. AI is great at replicating the patterns that it has seen and been trained on, like full wine glasses, but it doesn't actually know why it works or how it works. It doesn't know the things we humans know intuitively, like "filled to the brim means more liquid than full". It knows the what but doesn't get the why.
The same could apply to testing. AI knows how you solve test pages, but wouldn't be that exact if you were to try adapting it into real life.
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Right, I'm no expert (and very far from an AI fanboi), but not all "AI" are LLMs. I've heard there's good use cases in protein folding, recognising diagnostic patterns in medical images.
It fits with my understanding that you could train a similar model on more constrained datasets than 'all the English language text on the Internet' and it might be good at certain jobs.
Am I wrong?
The problems with AI we talk of here is mostly with generative AI. Protein folding, diagnostic patterns and weather prediction works a bit differently than image making or text writing services.
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There is no generative AI. It's just progressively more complicated chatbots. The goal is to fool the human into believing it's real.
Its what Frank Herbert was warning us all about in 1965.
What was Frank on about? The Butlerian Jihad I assume? Read the book 8 times and don't remember why thinking machines had gone rogue. ?
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lack of critical thinking is a feature in this administration
In this society, more like.
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Literal... I cannot stress this enough... Literal Idiocracy.
This is literally what happens in the film. Like the first 10 minutes.
Fuck.
I can't remember, what happened in the film?
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I can't remember, what happened in the film?
Luke Wilson's character goes to the hospital where an AI misdiagnosis him.
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https://infosec.exchange/@malwaretech/114903901544041519
the article since there is so much confusion what we are actually talking about
https://edition.cnn.com/2025/07/23/politics/fda-ai-elsa-drug-regulation-makaryFor specific things like protein folding "Ai" has been useful but that's not just a llm.
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I'm pretty sure that undermining confidence in drug approvals is a feature, not a bug. The same people who were screeching about mRNA vaccines being secret poison that was rushed through approval are the ones doing this now, so when (not if) it does actually lead to dangerous drugs being approved and a collapse in confidence in the FDA, they'll be the ones saying "We told you so" and getting their anti-medical way.
It's the exact same playbook Republicans use in the rest of the government: Say Government doesn't work, cry about government spending, and insist government regulation is crushing personal freedoms, then they actually do all of those things and when the next administration comes around they pass on the blame and say "I Told You So."
The FDA need to get out of the way anyway. So much of what could be done isn't done because they take their sweet time with decisions.
The average approval time for a new drug is about a decade mostly because the FDA just don't do anything for the first 9 and 1/2 years. The covid vaccines were approved in a hot minute though and there was absolutely no issues with them despite what the conspiracy theorists thought. In fact they primarily based their conspiracy theory on the fact that normally the FDA takes forever and today in order to approve anything. Proving only that it doesn't need to take that long in the first place.
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For specific things like protein folding "Ai" has been useful but that's not just a llm.
Yes, machine learning models trained to solve a specific problem can be very good at solving that problem. It's artificial "general" intelligence we haven't achieved but are trying to sell.