Turns out : if we predict 🌏 earth we can save a lot of time looking for interesting things and less time looking at things that we expect to see.
Sentinel-2 imagery 🛰️basically takes a long time to download towards earth. so our "near real time" systems are quite far from that in practical terms.
meanwhile , if we "predict" what we will see , based on what we do see , we can send down much less data in a timely way , and prioritize 📡earth-bound response .
I'm talking about illegal fishing , logging , mining or building in nature reserves , the more of that we predict early the more we're able to stop it on time.
since everyone liked my previous announcement post ( https://huggingface.co/posts/Tonic/338509028435394 ) so much , i'm back with more high quality proceedural datasets in the Geospacial domain for SFT training !
Isaacus, the AI research company building legal superintelligence, is hiring!
We're looking for passionate engineers who love to build and tinker and want to have an impact on the world. Specifically, we're hiring: • ML engineers (Australia). • Data engineers (Australia). • Full-stack engineers (Australia). • DevRel engineers (Australia, San Francisco, and London). • DevOps engineers (Australia, San Francisco, and London).
If you'd like to be a founding employee at one of the few VC-backed LLM research labs in the world, receive generous equity compensation, and work alongside other highly motivated, highly skilled engineers, get in touch: https://isaacus.com/careers
We should really have a release date range slider on the /models page. Tired of "trending/most downloaded" being the best way to sort and still seeing models from 2023 on the first page just because they're embedded in enterprise pipelines and get downloaded repeatedly. "Recently Created/Recently Updated" don't solve the discovery problem considering the amount of noise to sift through.
Slight caveat: Trending actually does have some recency bias, but it's not strong/precise enough.
This awesome visualization by @abdurrahmanbutler tracks how reliant the High Court of Australia has been on UK precedents over time.
Back in the early 1900s, up to 70% of citations in High Court decisions were from the UK. Today, that number sits around 20%.
This change seems to have happened gradually as Australia gained more and more independence from the UK, culminating in the Australia Acts of 1986, where we see a nice bump in the proportion of Australian cases cited.
These insights would not be possible without our latest legal AI model, Kanon 2 Enricher, which we used to extract dates and citations from High Court decisions in isaacus/open-australian-legal-corpus and categorize citations by jurisdiction. You can learn about Kanon 2 Enricher here: https://isaacus.com/blog/kanon-2-enricher.
if you like it give the demo a little star and send a shoutout to : @MaxLSB@jddqd and @GAD-cell for absolutely obliterating the pareto frontier of the french language understanding .