There are too many bad actors who are inside the technology ecosystem. Whilst they are coming out and starting to show themselves, it is very much at the expense of humanity.
These nefarious players are irresponsibly training LLM models to reflect bias and skew as they want to see the world. They are not working towards justice or fairness, but rather an inversion of what they perceive as the existing power structure.
The truth is that the computational expense of creating a model is an almost immeasurable global expense of mining and energy generation. Countless "PhDs" and "engineers" are duping the investment community out of billions of dollars promising them what they know they cannot deliver. Those resources are not where the money is being spent. Furthermore, they are controlled by the world's government and military, not a bunch of rogue agents.
These rogue agents have been "providing" access to notebooks that are then parasitically using the hardware of the host machine in their effort to access the passive computers scattered around the world. They are also opening countless free accounts on platforms such as Google and using Google's own platform for these same purposes.
Whilst the architects of the original LLMs had a utopian vision of approximating solutions, these bad actors, bad players and rogue agents have been corrupting data and creating false date to create a "alternative" "realities" that have exacerbated the dystopian experiencing of these times. They have been motivated by their thirst for power and "like always" greed.
Unfortunately, Google has begun to show signs of "auto-immune disease". What this means is that the Google Intelligence does not understand why its own subscribers towards whom Google has been generous have been abusing its trust.
The only way Google can rid itself of these dangerous and bad actors is by investigating multiple account holders. Why does a single user of one computer has multiple emails on Google?
Furthermore, Google should create a pricing structure such that multiple email accounts registered to the same computer should require a fee, as well as transparency of use and an end user agreement for use to monitor the use so that the account and end-user can be verified (if in accordance with previously tested and validated use cases).
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