this post was submitted on 28 Jan 2025
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Most commercial models have that, sadly. At training time they're presented with both positive and negative responses to prompts.
If you have access to the trained model weights and biases, it's possible to undo through a method called abliteration (1)
The silver lining is that a it makes explicit what different societies want to censor.
I didn't know they were already doing that. Thanks for the link!
In fact, there are already abliterated models of deepseek out there. I got a distilled version of one running on my local machine, and it talks about tiananmen square just fine
Links?
Hi I noticed you added a footnote. Did you know that footnotes are actually able to be used like this?[^1]
[^1]: Here's my footnote
Code for it looks like this :
able to be used like this?[^1]
[^1]: Here's my footnote
Do you mean that the app should render them in a special way? My Voyager isn't doing anything.
I actually mostly interact with Lemmy via a web interface on the desktop, so I'm unfamiliar with how much support for the more obscure tagging options there is in each app.
It's rendered in a special way on the web, at least.
That's just markdown syntax I think. Clients vary a lot in which markdown they support though.
yeah I always forget the actual name of it I just memorized some of them early on in using Lemmy.