WebSim, WorldSim, and The Summer of Simulative AI — with Joscha Bach of Liquid AI, Karan Malhotra of Nous Research, Rob Haisfield of WebSim.ai
Description
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Parental advisory: Adult language used in the first 10 mins of this podcast.
Any accounting of Generative AI that ends with RAG as its “final form” is seriously lacking in imagination and missing out on its full potential. While AI generation is very good for “spicy autocomplete” and “reasoning and retrieval with in context learning”, there’s a lot of untapped potential for simulative AI in exploring the latent space of multiverses adjacent to ours.
GANs
Many research scientists credit the 2017 Transformer for the modern foundation model revolution, but for many artists the origin of “generative AI” traces a little further back to the Generative Adversarial Networks proposed by Ian Goodfellow in 2014, spawning an army of variants and Cats and People that do not exist:
We can directly visualize the quality improvement in the decade since:
GPT-2
Of course, more recently, text generative AI started being too dangerous to release in 2019 and claiming headlines. AI Dungeon was the first to put GPT2 to a purely creative use, replacing human dungeon masters and DnD/MUD games of yore.
More recent gamelike work like the Generative Agents (aka Smallville) paper keep exploring the potential of simulative AI for game experiences.
ChatGPT
Not long after ChatGPT broke the Internet, one of the most fascinating generative AI finds was Jonas Degrave (of Deepmind!)’s Building A Virtual Machine Inside ChatGPT:
The open-ended interactivity of ChatGPT and all its successors enabled an “open world” type simulation where “hallucination” is a feature and a gift to dance with, rather than a nasty bug to be stamped out. However, further updates to ChatGPT seemed to “nerf” the model’s ability to perform creative simulations, particularly with the deprecation of the `completion` mode of APIs in favor of `chatCompletion`.
WorldSim (https://worldsim.nousresearch.com/)
It is with this context we explain WorldSim and WebSim. We recommend you watch the WorldSim demo video on our YouTube for the best context, but basically if you are a developer it is a Claude prompt that is a portal into another world of your own choosing, that you can navigate with bash commands that you make up.
The live video demo was highly enjoyable:
Why Claude? Hints from Amanda Askell on the Claude 3 system prompt gave some inspiration, and subsequent discoveries that Claude 3 is "less nerfed” than GPT 4 Turbo turned the growing Simulative AI community into Anthropic stans.
WebSim (https://websim.ai/)
This was a one day hackathon project inspired by WorldSim that should have won:
In short, you type in a URL that you made up, and Claude 3 does its level best to generate a webpage that doesn’t exist, that would fit your URL. All form POST requests are intercepted and responded to, and all links lead to even more webpages, that don’t exist, that are generated when you make them. All pages are cachable, modifiable and regeneratable - see WebSim for Beginners and Advanced Guide.
In the demo I saw we were able to “log in” to a simulation of Elon Musk’s Gmail account, and browse examples of emails that would have been in that universe’s Elon’s inbox. It was hilarious and impressive even back then.
Since then though, the project has become even more impressive, with both Siqi Chen and Dylan Field singing its praises:
Joscha Bach
Joscha actually spoke at the WebSim Hyperstition Night this week, so we took the opportunity to get his take on Simulative AI, as well as a round up of all his other AI hot takes, for his first appearance on Latent Space. You can see it together with the full 2hr uncut demos of WorldSim and WebSim on YouTube!
Timestamps
* [00:01:59] WorldSim at Replicate HQ
* [00:11:03] WebSim at AGI House SF
* [00:22:0
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We are still taking questions for our next big recap episode! Submit questions and messages on Speakpipe here...
Published 11/15/24
We are recording our next big recap episode and taking questions!
Submit questions and messages on Speakpipe here for a chance to appear on the show!
Also subscribe to our calendar for our Singapore, NeurIPS, and all upcoming meetups!
In our first ever episode with Logan Kilpatrick we called out...
Published 11/11/24