This is a big challenge with prompt leak attacks generally: the model just guesses what word should come next, so once it starts spitting out pieces of its own prompt it's perfectly capable of inventing new prompt segments out of thin air
And anything it invents will look convincing, because the whole point of large language models is to generate stuff that looks convincing!
On February 15 at 18:15 I will talk about "Sentiment Analysis for Latin: lexicons, annotation and automatic approaches" within the #DigitalHumanities colloquium at Freie Universität Berlin. No registration needed, just connect here: https://meet.in-berlin.de/dh_colloquium_fu_berlin
Some serious research in ChatGPT capacities and limitations https://arxiv.org/abs/2302.04023?fbclid=IwAR1Q3v7jty7nlejw1d4KEW4A4vxyPNKyZ3OhkUnTzM04vFOZ1fxAo8B6FcA
Berghotel Schatzalp near Davos was built between 1898 and 1900 as a sanatorium and was one of the inspirations for Thomas Mann's Novel "Der Zauberberg". It was one of the first reinforced concrete buildings in Graubünden and featured many modern technologies such as floor heating, an elevator and a mail and telegraph room. Since 1954, it is a hotel with 92 rooms are spread across three floors. #architecture #photography #Switzerland
@tschfflr @arockenberger That’s my approach as well. It’s just that I realized that when someone sits in their office but has an all-day Zoom meeting, it would be good to see this in the calendar as well: they’re effectively away.
@tschfflr @fpianz Maybe this was a bad example… It’s not about calendar usage!
I only picked this example because it’s relatively harmless, and it seems (to me) to illustrate an attitude that I’ve encountered in other cases as well. To put it a little bit more bluntly, it seems to me that the issue isn’t *not knowing* that the prof’s calendar is maybe different from your own, but *not caring*.
Vor 60 Jahren starb Carl Stucki – oder wie man vom #Idiotikon-Redaktor zum Überwacher des Waffenstillstands nach dem #Koreakrieg werden kann: https://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carl_Stucki
Postdoctoral positions available at the School of Information sciences. Salary of at least $60k + $2k for research and travel, 1/1 teaching load, renewable for two years. Please boost! https://ischool.illinois.edu/sites/default/files/documents/postdoc_positiondescription_2023_1.pdf
I wrote a longer-form piece on post.news about the concept of operationalization in AI and the way it disenfranchises communities from making decisions that the systems that govern their lives.
If you want to read it there: https://post.news/article/2LR4k0jt685pzd6uiGeHJlnBwo2
I'll also serialize it, below.
Looks like our #DigitalHumanities web app #ezlinavis (https://ezlinavis.dracor.org/), originally intended for extracting co-occurrence network data from literary texts, is also used in medical research. 😯 @cmil
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00432-022-04200-0
https://doi.org/10.21873/invivo.12976
@tschfflr Hmm, it’s obviously hard to give concrete examples… One issue is the “works for me” attitude. Example:
Me (after having finally found a slot for a short meeting with a millenial): When you’ve got long meetings in the morning and the afternoon, you’ve got to put them in the team calender.
Millenial: Why? We only needed two e-mails to find a slot for a meeting.
I’ve noticed that my expectations as a professor are sometimes quite different from those of my postdocs. This is not about research experience, etc., and not about culture, but rather basic work matters; things that go for me without saying. At first, I thought it was just me, but apparently colleagues have encountered similar issues as well.
Therefore I’m starting to wonder whether this is perhaps due to generational differences between #GenX (professors) and #Millenials (postdocs).
So, question for other #GenX professors: Do you have similar experiences? And if yes, any good approaches for dealing with it? #university #research
RECEPTIO's version of #receptiogate:
"In December 2022, we were the victim of a vicious defamation campaign via the web, which shut us down for a month. After a legal investigation that established that all the accusations against us were unfounded and the result of the ravings of a sick mind (to which haters gave credence), in February 2023 the centre resumed its cultural activities"
[https://www.receptio.eu/story]
The lack of a full stop after the last sentence suggests that the story isn't quite finished yet...
Im neuen SAGW-Newsletter gelesen: «Universität Zürich schafft unbefristete Stellen im Mittelbau», sog. Lecturer-Positionen in Lehre und Forschung. Die Stellen sind für Postdocs vorgesehen, Verbesserungen gibt es aber auch für Doktorierende und Assistierende. Bleibt nur die Frage der Finanzierung:
https://www.sagw.ch/sagw/aktuell/news/details/news/next-generation-uzh
Les différents modes d’écriture de l’histoire et leurs effets sur les pratiques historienne. https://www.infoclio.ch/de/les-diff%C3%A9rents-modes-d%E2%80%99%C3%A9criture-de-l%E2%80%99histoire-et-leurs-effets-sur-les-pratiques-historienne?utm_source=dlvr.it&utm_medium=mastodon #infoclioevent
We've made it easier to use the #Lua interpreter in #pandoc 3: calling `pandoc lua` (or invoking pandoc via a symlink named `pandoc-lua`) lets pandoc behave like the default `lua` binary, but with all of pandoc's libraries loaded. E.g.,
echo 'print(PANDOC_VERSION)' | pandoc lua
prints the version, and
pandoc lua script.lua
runs the given script.
#LuaLang
https://pandoc.org/MANUAL#running-pandoc-as-a-lua-interpreter
@bwyble Some of it has stood the test of time quite well ;-)
Associate professor of digital humanities, University of Lausanne, Switzerland
Professeur associé en humanités numériques, Université de Lausanne, Suisse