Note
This article was automatically translated using Google
The answer is yes!
Just start training a mental model of your AI from now on!
The purpose of our Moments is to share, so what triggers your desire to share must be something you encounter. In the Internet age, the proportion of sharing what you encounter may not even be 5%. It’s more about the feeling you get after seeing the news and other people’s circle of friends.
Such as commenting, or sharing a favorite photo and music.
Then we can build this kind of AI model. The training cycle will be very long, but it is also subtle. After all, your evaluation of something when you were twenty must be different from when you were thirty.
So the simpler way is:
Build your own information sources (such as news, headlines, Weibo, etc., they also make big data recommendations based on your preferences)
Executable algorithm (latitude includes: what time do you watch every day, what situations will trigger your desire to share, etc.)
Correction probability (the model is updated from time to time, but once the model has changed greatly compared with your real sharing, it is necessary to judge according to the source of information, what caused the change in your sharing, such as festivals? Life experience, etc. , it can be adjusted to the greatest extent, which is very important, because once you die, the system will adjust the sharing according to this correction algorithm)
Sending goals (some things you like to put on Moments, some things you like to put on Weibo, different social channels, and then make algorithm corrections)
Regular testing (you need a certain amount of time to conduct AI testing, turn on a switch, and then see if it will also trigger sharing when you want to share, or if you want to share when it wants to share, use it to adjust a “share trigger threshold”)
Finally, when you die, as long as there are people in the world who are willing to pay you for the server, then your social media will continue to be updated. Even friends who are not so close, don’t even know that you are dead, and what they see is still you.