• @LostWanderer
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    124 months ago

    Oh how surprising, corporations need to be slapped around a bit. They’ve grown too bold. 😬

      • @LostWanderer
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        14 months ago

        Yep, as regulation is surely coming because LLM development is such a Wild West Situation. Any scummy, dumpster fire Corpos will certainly put a rush on acquiring enough training data to make artists useless to them in the future. These mind blind, money-grubbing bastards are actively chasing that quick buck before it comes crashing down on them. Grab the bag and don’t get beat up with that regulation ruler!

        There are already some fuckwits (Apple, Anthropic, Nvidia, Salesforce) who actively scrapped content from YouTube titles and videos; data laundering that stolen content, but if you prompt their AI just right, you can see the direct influence the stolen data has on whatever the LLM generates. Reference Article It’s a gross practice that needs to be regulated and punished quickly because these corporations need regulation to be arm wrestled into barely acting civil.

  • Media Bias Fact CheckerB
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    54 months ago
    Ars Technica Media Bias Fact Check Credibility: [High] (Click to view Full Report)

    Ars Technica is rated with High Creditability by Media Bias Fact Check.

    Bias: Least Biased
    Factual Reporting: High
    Country: United States of America
    Full Report: https://mediabiasfactcheck.com/ars-technica/

    Check the bias and credibility of this article on Ground.News


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    Please consider supporting them by donating.

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    Media Bias Fact Check is a fact-checking website that rates the bias and credibility of news sources. They are known for their comprehensive and detailed reports.

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  • @[email protected]
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    4 months ago

    In mid-June, Forbes reported finding its content within Perplexity’s Pages tool with minimal attribution. Pages allows Perplexity users to curate content and share it with others. Ars Technica sister publication Wired later made similar claims, also noting suspicious traffic patterns from IP addresses likely linked to Perplexity that were ignoring robots.txt exclusions. Perplexity was also found to be manipulating its crawling bots’ ID string to get around website blocks.

    So hang on, they were caught stealing content, and now they’re trying to sign up the people they stole content from and get them to pay? If that’s not the textbook definition of racketeering and extortion I don’t know what is.