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by jrflowers
326 days ago
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>It's a very real suggestion It is only a “very real suggestion” if you believe that your argument might be effective. Do you believe that “skip meat for a day use LLMs for a year” will have a climate impact? Because if not then you agree with me that in this case theoretical vegans are just being used to justify more real consumption, not less >stupid strawman about elon's toxic generators They exist in the real world, right now. It is a real phenomenon and no matter how many vegans I imagine it’s still there. I’m not really clear on why the real thing that’s really happening is a strawman unless you think that the existence of that system is so bad that it undermines your position. Even then it wouldn’t be a strawman though, just a thing that doesn’t support your position that using LLMs is categorically fine because you can picture a vegan in your head |
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If "use LLMs for a year" is enough to count as having a climate impact (negatively), then yes I believe "skip meat for a day use LLMs for a year" is enough to count (positively).
I'd be tempted to write off both of those, but the whole point of your argument is to consider LLM resource use important, so I'm completely accepting that for the sake of the above argument.
There are no theoretical vegans involved.
And the suggestion doesn't even involve vegans, unless there's a massive contingent of americans that only eat meat one day per year that I wasn't aware of.
And to get at what I think is your core objection: The fact that people can do this isn't being used to let companies off the hook. If only 2% of LLM users set up a meat skipping day, then LLM companies are only 2% let off the hook.
But at the same time let's keep a proportional sense of how big the hook is.
> They exist in the real world, right now. It is a real phenomenon
The strawman is you accusing people of supporting those generators.
> your position that using LLMs is categorically fine
I didn't say that.