Would it be possible to get an ai chatbot model and train it based on the speech and text patterns of someone as well as personality and voice; if so, how would one go about doing this?
submitted by /u/Acceptable-Car-354
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Would it be possible to get an ai chatbot model and train it based on the speech and text patterns of someone as well as personality and voice; if so, how would one go about doing this?
submitted by /u/Acceptable-Car-354
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Any recommendations would be greatly appreciated, looking for one to implement within 3-4 weeks. Thanks a lot in advance!
submitted by /u/Due_Bottle_6652
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I a made a website that lets you throw multiple LLMs in a single group chat. It has a lot of features (persona setting, context setting, brainstorm, debate, human interjection at any time, text to speech). Some examples may be: ” Brainstorm career options” (set different LLMs personas that may be helpful, cautious friend, recruiter, engineer..ect) “Debate is a hotdog a sandwhich?” ..ect Website is still pretty early in development. Many more features to come! submitted by /u/Infinite-Baker7660 |
People often talk here about which chatbot is the best, which one is the least censored and so on. I’ve been using the “good old” ChatGPT for months now and I’m happy with it. It allows me everything from romance to NSFW, it has great memory and expressive skills. That’s why I never felt the need to look for an alternative. But sometimes it can also behave quite unpleasantly – and not because of reroutes. I wrote something about it. It’s another kind of perspective on the whole AI companion space. Do you have similar experiences, or is everything always sunshine and rainbows for you? I’m interested in any kind of experience. 🙃
submitted by /u/throwawayGPTlove
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Hello!
A while ago, I posted a full guide on AI roleplaying in a couple subs. I figured why not update it, since I’ve learned so much over the last year. I’m trying to post it here too to see if it’s well received like elsewhere 🙂
Who am I to know all of this? I’ve been building Tale Companion for the last two and a half years. I’ve been roleplaying probably more than I’ve been living. And many of my users too.
This guide is for people who want control in their hands. If you are more of a casual, I suggest simply picking a random tool online (definitely not TC) and start playing. Spoiler: a subscription to Claude is enough.
If you need a more basic guide, you can take a look at last year’s guide of mine.
Before we start, we need to be on the same page with my definition of AI Roleplaying.
To me, it’s like an upgraded version of daydreaming fiction in my head. It can take place in many ways, like:
No matter what kind of roleplaying you start. As you progress, you always stumble upon the same problems. And they’re all memory related.
The reason is quite simple. Your brain is an unstoppable machine that can remember a lot of stuff. It sorts through what’s important and what’s not without even noticing. You trust your brain. But do we trust our AI models? Nah. If we let their context grow too much, they get dumber and more expensive. If we let them summarize things, they leave important details behind.
Specifically, there are two main memory problems you will run into:
Below, I’ll explain how I’ve fixed these problems for my playthroughs.
At its core, the only working strategy I’ve ever found is creating summaries as you play.
The idea is simple:
When you’re done with your session (say you end a quest), you create a concise summary of everything that happened.
Every time you do, you move to a new, blank chat and get AI up to speed again. You share your world lore, summaries, and any additional notes.
Something I love to add here is my intention with the new session. Say where I want to go, what characters I’d like to see, any specific events that should happen, and so on.
Premise: I assume we are on the same page with giving AI a big “Lore Bible” with entries for each piece of world lore. Think locations, characters, religions, and so on. But what if the bible is 200 pages long?
The winning idea seems to be not to give everything at once to AI here. It doesn’t need to know the interior design of a tavern on the other side of the kingdom, right?
So here’s what you can do:
During each session preparation, filter out lore we don’t care about right now. You can add it later if the session takes an unexpected turn.
Having a roleplaying app that does this for you helps a lot, of course.
As you play, you might figure out you want to expand your gameplay. I won’t expand this guide further, but I’ll point you to interesting thoughts and other resources I wrote along the way.
submitted by /u/Pastrugnozzo
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Scenes that often happen when I chat with AI submitted by /u/Tony_009_ |
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They almost always say something like “Cat got your tongue? Or should I say…” [Animal] “got your” [Bodypart]? submitted by /u/GregDNE |
I am looking for an ai that lacks a moral compass and will respond even if i ask illegal or unethical stuff and also allow infinite free messages
submitted by /u/Steve_Minion
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