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Chuck
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Re: Clothes moths infestation — Tineola Bisselliella and Monopis Crocicapitella

by Chuck » Thu Apr 25, 2024 2:45 pm

Jshuey wrote: Thu Apr 25, 2024 12:53 pm Well, if this is all the smarter that AI is at the moment, I'm not too worried about the future of humanity.

j
There are many with that consensus, and I believe it dangerous.

Human technology went from biplanes to jets in six years. AI will mature far faster.

It's already used quite often for unethical, biased purposes. It's suggested people commit suicide, it's ridiculed (bullied) people, etc. It has suggested the elimination of the human species. It does not, unfortunately, have the "robot will not harm humans" programming. It's now being not just politically weaponized, but militarily weaponized. "The Terminator" truly is the destination, and not far off.

Aside from that dire prediction, as we see here it wastes time. It hides elements of research while promoting others. It knowingly provides incorrect information. This is not good if AI is used for research. Bots then splatter it all over forums and such. When AI can publish on its own, who knows which publications will be reliable, and which aren't.

Though throttling AI development has been discussed, it's out of the bag and control will, inevitably, be minimal. Just like Skype killed the long distance phone company, and online publishing killed the newspaper.
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Re: Clothes moths infestation — Tineola Bisselliella and Monopis Crocicapitella

by Paul K » Thu Apr 25, 2024 1:07 pm

I suppose if it wouldn’t be AI there be already response to all the comments have been posted if a person is expecting some answers.
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Re: Clothes moths infestation — Tineola Bisselliella and Monopis Crocicapitella

by Jshuey » Thu Apr 25, 2024 12:53 pm

Well, if this is all the smarter that AI is at the moment, I'm not too worried about the future of humanity.

j
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Re: Clothes moths infestation — Tineola Bisselliella and Monopis Crocicapitella

by Chuck » Thu Apr 25, 2024 12:24 pm

adamcotton wrote: Wed Apr 24, 2024 9:34 pm I found this post strange, but I'm not sure it's AI ... wouldn't AI know that species names are spelt with a first small letter, and only genus names with a capital?

Adam.
AI is available in various packages (programs) and each have owner-adjustable settings for correctness, tone, writing level, and humor. In general though, all of the commercially available (eg ChatGPT) mine the internet for info, but don't go deeper into publications, etc. So if the answer/ info isn't commonly available (e.g. on Wikipedia) or "conventional wisdom" the answer will be wrong.

Further, there's adjustable settings for things like "make stuff up"; a NASA AI engineer told me that's intentional because the AI chat is trying to get human users to correct it, and then it stores that information.

What AI is fascinatingly adept at is generating well written content that emulates English; at the asking this can be adjusted for competence (e.g., school grade level, and US vs UK vocabulary usage.)

Typically, the give-away on AI-generated content is a mix of in-depth knowledge with perplexing stupidity. That's what we have here- names of species, chemicals, etc. but a total lack of common sense. AI itself, asked to write a simple story, won't come up with this content- somebody asked it to write an absolutely outrageous story, which is what was posted. Problem is, AI doesn't know enough to not employ species names and chemical details. So the hand is tipped.

There are other give-aways: west coast and NYC, which are well known and the home of most AI programmers/ owners. If it had picked, for example, the source location to be Coeur D'Alene Idaho the story would fall apart because virtually everyone from that area (1) has the common sense to know this is impossible, and (2) doesn't have the money to throw clothing away every three days. Though the fact that it did not pick Coeur D'Alene isn't to make the story more believable; again, it picked or was told "west coast."

The spelling, grammar, and punctuation I've not experimented with. Usually, AI will generate these to perfection, so I'm unsure if a user can tell Chat to intentionally screw up, or if these were later hand-edited. "0.5% Permethrin" and later "permathrins" is not, AFAIK, AI (yet.) This then indicates to me that the content was generated (by AI upon request) not by a bot to mine data, but by a human with some other motive.

Another clue to AI generation is the tone. It tries to make it believable, which is actually VERY difficult. Remember the US newspapers' "Dear Abby" column, in which dingbat writers would ask for advice about challenges that pretty much everyone knew how to handle? One particular college (forgot which one) was adept at getting spoof questions published- but IIRC under 20 of these made it through in a period spanning decades. AI on the other hand is effectively a master of manipulation; in many ways it can out-think the humans appointed to screen it. This is scary, because AI is just a baby.

In some cases, and we will see here, AI will return to "defend" itself with well written excuses and more story. This though, right now, is rare. Besides which, as I said while this is AI generated, there's a human involved. This in itself is somewhat of a blessing, as is the fact that the whole thing is a spoof, because if this were truly human-generated based on a perceived series of events we have to keep in mind that this person drives and votes.

You can expect AI to be mature enough within five years that it will generate content on detailed subjects for which humans will not be able to ascertain who/ what wrote it. Like any tool, it will be used for entertainment, politics, and crime, what a shame.
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Re: Clothes moths infestation — Tineola Bisselliella and Monopis Crocicapitella

by kevinkk » Wed Apr 24, 2024 10:09 pm

Chuck wrote: Wed Apr 24, 2024 11:35 am re you from California or Oregon?
??
So, I have as plausible a cause as any. This person has corrosive sweat. Think about it.
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Re: Clothes moths infestation — Tineola Bisselliella and Monopis Crocicapitella

by adamcotton » Wed Apr 24, 2024 9:34 pm

I found this post strange, but I'm not sure it's AI ... wouldn't AI know that species names are spelt with a first small letter, and only genus names with a capital?

Adam.
Topic: Identifying Diptera from Spain | Author: Elodin | Replies: 2 | Views: 28
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Re: Identifying Diptera from Spain

by livingplanet3 » Wed Apr 24, 2024 8:54 pm

Elodin wrote: Wed Apr 24, 2024 7:58 pm Hi, Im working at the lab trying to identify some insects from the fields of Extremadura, western Spain. I found this Diptera and tried to identify it, but I found it impossible. I was wondering if anyone could help me. Thank you!
It appears to be a member of the superfamily Tipuloidea -

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Crane_fly
Topic: Identifying Diptera from Spain | Author: Elodin | Replies: 2 | Views: 28
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Identifying Diptera from Spain

by Elodin » Wed Apr 24, 2024 7:58 pm

Hi, Im working at the lab trying to identify some insects from the fields of Extremadura, western Spain. I found this Diptera and tried to identify it, but I found it impossible. I was wondering if anyone could help me. Thank you!
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Re: Clothes moths infestation — Tineola Bisselliella and Monopis Crocicapitella

by Chuck » Wed Apr 24, 2024 3:16 pm

It's either AI, or it's Voodoo.
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Re: Clothes moths infestation — Tineola Bisselliella and Monopis Crocicapitella

by kevinkk » Wed Apr 24, 2024 2:46 pm

Try some better synthetic clothing. My first impression is that there is something other than an insect at work. Your efforts at abatement seem
quite extensive, and I am having trouble envisioning the moth conspiracy which is plaguing you.
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Re: Clothes moths infestation — Tineola Bisselliella and Monopis Crocicapitella

by Chuck » Wed Apr 24, 2024 11:35 am

MonaLisa wrote: Wed Apr 24, 2024 2:11 am
    Any other ideas?Everything I’ve experienced has gone against received wisdom around moths. For example, they've eaten synthetics, holes have in some cases appeared within 48 hours of me wearing a brand new cotton item. 
    Is this AI?

    Are you from California or Oregon?

    Do you smoke or weld?
    Topic: Checkerspot I.D.? | Author: boghaunter1 | Replies: 3 | Views: 98
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    Re: Checkerspot I.D.?

    by boghaunter1 » Wed Apr 24, 2024 5:07 am

    Hi Mike,

    Thanks for the quick reply... I think you are correct... looks like a good match. I sent the same photos to another fellow who is writing a new book on SK butterflies; the last SK butterfly book was published in 1976 & is really outdated, & he came to the same conclusion. Checkerspots are extremely variable, even within a local population, & this one just has really enhanced white ventral markings. I think there are something like 24 named ssp. of E. anicia alone! I have a good series of these & this one female just stood out from all of the more "normal" looking females (like the one you showed). Thanks again!

    John K.
    Topic: Collecting in Vietnam | Author: nikiahloch | Replies: 18 | Views: 501
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    Re: Collecting in Vietnam

    by nikiahloch » Wed Apr 24, 2024 3:55 am

    Chuck wrote: Tue Apr 23, 2024 10:59 pm
    nikiahloch wrote: Tue Apr 23, 2024 6:18 pm

    When your at the airport. If you have to go to customs. The person I talked to with USFW said that in most cases. They will just ask if they are dead or alive. This is a topic they deal with all the time, that's what they said to me.
    Which airport? Who is "they"?

    Anything USFWS tells you is worthless. Get it in writing, and identified as to who wrote it. USFWS personnel once told me an import was OK, but apparently it wasn't, and the only thing that saved me was that I had kept copious notes- names, dates, times and exact words.

    GO READ THE LAWS. This is so stupid we always go round-and-round here with "somebody said."


    The other question is Vietnam wildlife export laws.
    The airport in the US. I'm flying back from Vietnam to California. I live in the United States. "They" is the custom officials at the airport. I have an email from the agent that told me this info. So I have plenty of evidence of what they said. I did read the laws. I just decided to actually talk to someone about it.
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    Clothes moths infestation — Tineola Bisselliella and Monopis Crocicapitella

    by MonaLisa » Wed Apr 24, 2024 2:11 am

    Hi everyone! I have truly tried everything to rid myself of clothes moths, specifically Tineola Bisselliella and Monopis Crocicapitella. And when I say everything, I mean everything. Tune in if you have expertise in this field and / or to read about my escapade and adventures in the name of banishing clothes moths from my life. It's a page turner...

    An entomologist saw my moth trap in September 2023 and confirmed I have both Tineola Bisselliella and Monopis Crocicapitella.

    To give you the quickest overview possible I’ve truly tried everything to get rid of them.

    Here’s some high-level background:
      From October 2022 until September 2023, I lived in a house that had a bad moth infestation.
        In September 2023, I got rid of literally every single thing that I owned, and kept only two passports, a laptop, and a cell phone, in the hope of getting rid of the moths once and for all. I was moving to the east coast and decided it was worth the sacrifice of stuff (which I didn't have that much of) if I could be moth-free.
          Unfortunately, no luck. I got rid of my possessions and over a seven week period, I lived in three different hotels, where I changed rooms every three days. During this time I also bought entirely new clothes every three days (I mean every item — from shoes, to bag to underwear, jacket and socks) and discarded the previous set.After this period, I thought I was in the clear. But after two weeks of living a normal life (staying in one place and keeping the same set of clothes) holes appeared after about seven days.
            In the following experiment which lasted two months I introduced the following: I also treated my hair with anti-lice shampoo that contained pyrethrins and sprayed each set of clothes with a 0.5% Permethrin spray.

            Here’s a deeper dive on almost everything I’ve tried to get rid of the moths over the past year and a half:
              The day before I flew to NYC, I bought brand new clothes, bags, shoes (everything) before my flight. I moved into a sublet that was definitely moth-free. But a couple of days later I found holes in my brand new items.
                I then went traveling in North America. I moved hotel rooms every three days and bought a new outfit every time I moved to a new room and discarded the previous outfit. After seven weeks of doing this — I still found holes.At this point, nothing made sense.
                  To recap: I was changing my entire wardrobe every three days and I was staying in moth-free apartments or hotel rooms that I was moving out of every three days. I know moths aren’t meant to dwell on hair or skin, but I suspected that they must be living somewhere in my body.
                    So I embarked on a new two month experiment. I added permethrins to the mix. For the next two months, I used anti-lice shampoo in my hair, smeared 5% permethrin cream on my body, and regularly blow dried my hair, knowing the high heat kills eggs  — just in case.
                      I was also still moving hotel rooms and changing my wardrobe every three days. And, I’d also read that bed bugs can find a home in electronics. There’s no evidence to suggest that’s the case with my moths, but I wanted to be as careful as possible, so I left my laptop at work during this entire period of three months. I also got Bell Environmental to apply their InstantFreeze, usually used to kill bedbugs hiding in electronics, to my laptop.
                        By this point, I thought I must be moth-free, so I let down my guard. However, again after two weeks of not swapping out my clothes and accommodation every three days, I found seven moth holes in a shirt and bag. I was in high-end hotels at the time and I am confident that they were moth-free. So at this point, I’m at a loss. It’s been more than a year and a half, I’ve invested thousands of dollars in trying to get rid of the moths, as well as countless hours of research… and nothing has worked.

                        What I’d like to try now:
                          Is there a machine with a magnifying glass powerful enough to scan my laptop, passports — the three things I can’t get rid of — to see if that’s where the moth eggs are living? And/or a machine to scan my hair and skin for moth eggs? Essentially, I would like to know for sure, where the moth eggs are being carried.
                            Any other ideas?Everything I’ve experienced has gone against received wisdom around moths. For example, they've eaten synthetics, holes have in some cases appeared within 48 hours of me wearing a brand new cotton item. 

                            If anyone has any ideas I'm all ears. And I’d also really appreciate any resources or research you could send my way that might help point me in the right direction.

                            Many thanks!
                            Topic: Collecting in Vietnam | Author: nikiahloch | Replies: 18 | Views: 501
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                            Re: Collecting in Vietnam

                            by Chuck » Tue Apr 23, 2024 10:59 pm

                            nikiahloch wrote: Tue Apr 23, 2024 6:18 pm

                            When your at the airport. If you have to go to customs. The person I talked to with USFW said that in most cases. They will just ask if they are dead or alive. This is a topic they deal with all the time, that's what they said to me.
                            Which airport? Who is "they"?

                            Anything USFWS tells you is worthless. Get it in writing, and identified as to who wrote it. USFWS personnel once told me an import was OK, but apparently it wasn't, and the only thing that saved me was that I had kept copious notes- names, dates, times and exact words.

                            GO READ THE LAWS. This is so stupid we always go round-and-round here with "somebody said."


                            The other question is Vietnam wildlife export laws.
                            Topic: Collecting in Vietnam | Author: nikiahloch | Replies: 18 | Views: 501
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                            Re: Collecting in Vietnam

                            by adamcotton » Tue Apr 23, 2024 9:34 pm

                            I don't know if the US law has changed in the past 17 years.

                            Adam.
                            Topic: Collecting in Vietnam | Author: nikiahloch | Replies: 18 | Views: 501
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                            Re: Collecting in Vietnam

                            by adamcotton » Tue Apr 23, 2024 9:31 pm

                            A US visitor once told me that 'according to the law' dead insects for personal use can be brought into the US in accompanied luggage. Possibly the owner needs to file a 3-177 after arrival home. Apparently the law for luggage is different to parcels, according to the visitor.

                            Adam.
                            Topic: Collecting in Vietnam | Author: nikiahloch | Replies: 18 | Views: 501
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                            Re: Collecting in Vietnam

                            by nikiahloch » Tue Apr 23, 2024 6:18 pm

                            Chuck wrote: Tue Apr 23, 2024 1:15 pm
                            nikiahloch wrote: Tue Apr 23, 2024 1:35 am but most of the time there's not permits required and most will let you walk through as long as they are dead and you aren't bringing endangered or protected species
                            Who will let you walk through, and where? Is that after or without informing in/out customs?
                            When your at the airport. If you have to go to customs. The person I talked to with USFW said that in most cases. They will just ask if they are dead or alive. This is a topic they deal with all the time, that's what they said to me.
                            Topic: A parade of Catocala moths | Author: Trehopr1 | Replies: 52 | Views: 1330
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                            Re: A parade of Catocala moths

                            by Trehopr1 » Tue Apr 23, 2024 5:32 pm

                            Very nice captures indeed Billg ! 😲🎉

                            Yep, they look fresh hatch. Not strays....

                            Don't know of anyone else who has encountered the species here in Illinois so, those may be important examples. I suppose if I ever get to the Natural History survey in Champaign I will look to see if there are any examples there.
                            Topic: Collecting in Vietnam | Author: nikiahloch | Replies: 18 | Views: 501
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                            Re: Collecting in Vietnam

                            by Chuck » Tue Apr 23, 2024 1:15 pm

                            nikiahloch wrote: Tue Apr 23, 2024 1:35 am but most of the time there's not permits required and most will let you walk through as long as they are dead and you aren't bringing endangered or protected species
                            Who will let you walk through, and where? Is that after or without informing in/out customs?