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#1
Off the Record / Re: The Off Topic Topic
Last post by crazy canuck - Today at 08:25:31 AM
Quote from: Richard Hakluyt on Today at 02:56:10 AMI enjoyed my visit, but that was 20 years ago and everything was very cheap. Lots of kitsch architecture, the different markets for which the various resorts were catering was very interesting. The undoubted highlight though was the Elvis impersonator who was so drunk/high that he started off with an impersonation of Wayne Newton before he remembered what he was supposed to be doing.

Yeah, that was its charm. I was cheap in every sense of the word. But now it is expensive and it's trying to pose as a luxury destination.  No thanks, I can spend less money at a real luxury location.
#2
Off the Record / Re: Brexit and the waning days...
Last post by Sheilbh - Today at 07:47:20 AM
Totally separately but the OBR published its update before the budget by mistake. Apparently due to a "technical error".

I still think we should abolish the OBR in general.

But on this - people need to resign/be fired. We've got the City making moves on it but also the Guardian live blogging what the Chancellor is going to announce as they work through the OBR report before they've even stood up in the Commons. It's clown-ish.
#3
Off the Record / Re: Brexit and the waning days...
Last post by Sheilbh - Today at 07:39:52 AM
Yaeh I'm with RH on this particularly on the example of protest and speech trials - and we can see how judges treat those same cases because they throw the book generally.

What the government are proposing is nothing like France. France has investigating judges who direct criminal investigations and decide whether there is then sufficient evidence to send the case to court. The judge's role is inquisitorial - it is to determine the truth. That is an entirely different role and purpose philosophically for the judge than ours. It'd be a far more radical reform (and you'd need a lot more judges).

Similarly I think in Italy you have the more common mixed jury of judge and lay people. However the jury is responsible not just for determining guilt, but for also setting out reasons and determining sentence. In England and Wales the jury simply rules on the facts, the sentencing and legal analysis based on that finding of fact is for the judge. I think Italy also has investigating judges but I'm not sure.

I don't think it is necessarily right or wrong or that juries are always necessary. I think there's a case for removing jury trial for certain types of offence and raising the bar to get a jury bar more generally. But juries are a kind of essential part of how our system has developed. This isn't just a formal point of we have juries and some of Europe. We have very different systems. As you see with Italy and France - both incidentally have (and need) far more judges. Which I think is also the problem. If the government wants to reform and move us to a more inquisitorial or judge led system that's a defensible position - but it is a radical reform so they'd need to make the case, build the argument and probably spend quite a lot of money re-training existing judges and recruiting new ones. But the driver here isn't that philosophical or structural shift - it's just that they need to save a bit of money and there's a backlog of cases (due to underinvestment).

It's a bit like the welfare cuts. There's absolutely a case for welfare reform that would, in the medium/long term, reduce the costs of disability and long-term sickness benefits (which are increasing rapidly). But that's not what the government tried to do. The Treasury told DWP they needed to cut an extra £5 billion to make the numbers add up and that's what they came up with. It's the same here.
#4
Off the Record / Re: Brexit and the waning days...
Last post by Richard Hakluyt - Today at 07:28:54 AM
I'm arguing for the right to call for a trial by jury, not mandatory trial by jury. For most offences it will just be trial by magistrate, as it is now. But if someone is in a politically sensitive trial (such as those silly buggers with the orange powder at stonehenge or the "we support Palestine Action" crowd, I think it is only right that they can call for a trial by jury.
#5
Off the Record / Re: The AI dooooooom thread
Last post by Josquius - Today at 07:27:53 AM
Quote from: Tamas on Today at 06:50:44 AMAnyways, we have been ignoring a key question:

How can LLMs be made to play computer games?

I was thinking: if the UI of something like a Paradox game could be "translated" into a format processable by these "AIs" (so, text, I guess) then they would be able to learn optimal strategies from online sources, wouldn't they?


Video games are a key one for me where I really raise my eyebrow at the recent talk of AI as this new and amazing revolutionary thing. We've had AI for....ages. LLMs are not the same thing as all AI.
I do wonder when LLM will become more of a mainstream term.


I got to thinking the other day too- all companies, governments, etc... are going on about how they will embrace AI and become so brilliant for it. There's lots of worries about this for jobs, quality of output, etc....
It strikes me though....Its not that LLMs are entirely something new here. Cast your mind way back to pre-covid....And much the same stuff was being said. Only it was about data. Not AI. And it didn't have half as much marketing success.
#6
Off the Record / Re: Brexit and the waning days...
Last post by Josquius - Today at 07:23:34 AM
That's a problem with the law. Not with the way the law is enforced.
If I were to be accused of a crime I didn't commit then I'd absolutely trust a group of trained experts to decide on the truth of things than a bunch of randomers pulled off the street.
There's other problems that become more pertinent taking the European approach- the need for more diverse judges for instance- but I do think we are in a very different situation today to pre-industrial times when there was a genuine need to put chicken theft in front of a jury rather than a group of guys who deal with this every day and are firmly neutral.
#7
Off the Record / Re: Brexit and the waning days...
Last post by Tamas - Today at 07:23:16 AM
Yeah I'd rather keep trial by jury around.
#8
Off the Record / Re: Brexit and the waning days...
Last post by Richard Hakluyt - Today at 07:03:14 AM
Most of Europe is wrong then  :P

I completely disagree with you on this. Take, for example, the government's current efforts to curtail free speech and protests. With the "rationalist European approach" people falling foul of these laws will simply be punished. In the UK, with trial by jury, if the government is engaged in unpopular overreach, then the plaintiffs can be found not guilty.

I would say thet curbing free speech, which the government is trying to do, is unpopular in a non-partisan way. Why make things easy for these wannabe masters?
#9
Off the Record / Re: The AI dooooooom thread
Last post by crazy canuck - Today at 07:01:20 AM
Quote from: Tamas on Today at 06:50:44 AMAnyways, we have been ignoring a key question:

How can LLMs be made to play computer games?

I was thinking: if the UI of something like a Paradox game could be "translated" into a format processable by these "AIs" (so, text, I guess) then they would be able to learn optimal strategies from online sources, wouldn't they?

Yes, but it would not be able to distinguish good strategies from bad.  So the same problems exist and are likely worse as AI inevitably gets trained on AI slop.
#10
Off the Record / Re: Russo-Ukrainian War 2014-2...
Last post by Tamas - Today at 06:52:56 AM
Rest easy, on very short notice, Orban is visiting Moscow on Friday. Probably receiving new orders.