• Boozilla
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        1173 months ago

        I’ve seen threads where every single comment, no matter how anodyne, has 1 downvote. Don’t bother yourself over it. That way lies madness.

            • mozingo
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              113 months ago

              Lmao the down votes on this are really funny to me

              • teft
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                83 months ago

                What I get a kick out of is the down and upvotes mean basically nothing and yet people still get super sensitive about them. They only move your comment up or down the thread. It’s not like reddit where there is a karma count for all your posts and comments. Hell you don’t even get auto hidden like the way reddit would do. You just get downvoted.

                Some people downvote to show disapproval. Others downvote if the comment doesn’t add to the conversation. Still others are just trolling. No one should worry about the downvotes.

        • @[email protected]
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          343 months ago

          anodyne

          anodyne /ăn′ə-dīn″/ adjective

          1. Capable of soothing or eliminating pain.
          2. Relaxing. “anodyne novels about country life.”
          3. Serving to assuage pain; soothing.

          tanks fer noo werd dae fren

        • @[email protected]
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          83 months ago

          I always figure it’s someone whose life has become so pathetic, they bitterly downvote every single comment to try feel some control. And as a result, they feel like the Phantom of the Socials. Alone, but the true master of the place.

          Everyone must wonder, ‘Who keeps downvoting us?’ It is I! The true Master of Lemmy and- No, mother!.. Yes, mother!.. I tried but nobody wants to talk to me!.. I don’t want to!.. Yeah, she’s cute!.. I don’t want you to do that!.. Mother put the phone down!”

          • Boozilla
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            43 months ago

            LOL, I can picture this person. They probably have a gross-looking bandaid on their downvote finger.

      • @[email protected]
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        3 months ago

        Lol how about every pirate who fundamentally opposes the copyright system?

        How about everyone who uses Google and doesn’t want to see it shut down for scraping copyrighted content to provide a search engine?

        Seriously, explain to me what’s different at a fundamental level about OpenAI scraping the web and transforming the data through an LLM and Google scraping the web and transforming the data through their algorithms (which include LLMs)?

        • @[email protected]
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          463 months ago

          Google (used to) scrapes the specific details authorized by robots.txt and uses it to make your content visible.

          OpenAI scrapes everything it can technically see, ignoring robots.txt and feeds i to a black box and regurgitates it claiming it’s something new, that it deserves to be paid for.

          Quite different actually.

          • @[email protected]
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            83 months ago

            So if OpenAI complies with Robots.txt files then there’s no issue right?

            Because then they’re identical. Open AI spent a bunch of money building a powerful system they feed those results to, as did Google.

              • @[email protected]
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                83 months ago

                Actually Google tries their hardest NOT to point you to content. They scrape the data from sites and display it directly in the search results so that you don’t need to visit any site except Google. Their new AI answers that they are pushing on users are just another step in that direction.

                • @[email protected]
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                  93 months ago

                  Which is why Google is no longer my default browser. I’d be quite happy if it reverted Back to don’t be evil or just ceased ro exist

              • @[email protected]
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                63 months ago

                Literally every page Google shows you, where it also shows you those ads it makes money from, is Google’s content and it is derived from the data it gets scraping the web.

                • @[email protected]
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                  173 months ago

                  What the fuck are you even talking about? Making a list of website identifiers (names and URLs) so that people can go to them isn’t even slightly the same as making a derived work of the websites’ contents.

        • @[email protected]
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          123 months ago

          Web search used to be about scraping the web to find and present other people’s work as just that… their work. Now the handful of websites claim ownership of the contributions of everyone, and at this point it’s just corporations arguing about who owns your stuff. Pirates will not win out in this argument, except maybe in the very short term.

        • oce 🐆
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          83 months ago

          Search engines provide source, they scrap for indexing, but your search gives a list of websites that matches that you will then likely visit. That’s a big fundamental difference.

        • I dont see why why being downvoted you make some very good points.

          Id actually like to see google shut down on copyright grounds. The innovation of necessity would drive foss search alternatives that just ignore said restrictions and most likly we would end up with a better product.

          • @[email protected]
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            13 months ago

            Yes they do, just indirectly, it’s how they monopolized the online advertising business.

      • Buelldozer
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        83 months ago

        WHO is the one guy who downvotes you???

        That’s the bot that ChatGPT operates here on Lemmy.

          • m-p{3}
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            3 months ago

            Votes aren’t private on the fediverse, it’s just a that some interfaces won’t display them. Also, instance admins can see who voted too.

            But like @[email protected] said

            Don’t bother yourself over it. That way lies madness.

            It mainly useful for admins to detect if there is some vote manipulation going on.

      • @[email protected]
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        33 months ago

        To steel man the downvoters, maybe there are other solutions besides killing off every business that can’t afford to comply with copyright. After all, isn’t the whole point of copyright to enable the capitalist exploitation of information?

      • @[email protected]
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        133 months ago

        I’d love to see how scared some big companies would be if we could decriminalize piracy

    • mozz
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      Honestly this meme is way understating the sinisterness

      • Election interference for money machine
      • Whole internet is ads company
      • Dopamine addiction for all children
      • Superpowers for law enforcement
  • Admiral Patrick
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    2623 months ago

    Yeah! I can’t make money running my restaurant if I have to pay for the ingredients, so I should be allowed to steal them. How else can I make money??

    Alternatively:

    OpenAI is no different from pirate streaming sites in this regard (loosely: streaming sites are way more useful to humanity). If OpenAI gets a pass, so should every site that’s been shut down for piracy.

    • ArchRecord
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      1113 months ago

      If OpenAI wants a pass, then just like how piracy services make content freely open and available, they should make their models open.

      Give me the weights, publish your datasets, slap on a permissive license.

      If you’re not willing to contribute back to society with what you used from it, then you shouldn’t exist within society until you do so.

      • @[email protected]
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        573 months ago

        Piracy steals from the rich and gives to the poor. ChatGPT steals from the rich and the poor and keeps for itself.

        • ArchRecord
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          83 months ago

          and keeps for itself.

          Which is why they should be legally compelled to publicize all of their datasets, models, research, and share any profits they’ve made with the works they can get provenance data for, because otherwise, it’s an unfair use of the public sphere of content.

          One could very easily argue that adblockers are piracy, and those would be stealing from every social media creator, small blog, and independent news site, but I don’t see many people arguing against that, even though that very well includes people who aren’t wealthy corporations.

          The issue isn’t necessarily the use of the copyrighted content, it’s the unfair legal stance taken on who can use the content, and how they are allowed to profit (or not profit) from it.

          I’m not saying there are no downsides, but I do feel like a simple black and white dichotomy doesn’t properly outline how piracy and generative AI training are relatively similar in terms of who they steal from, and it’s more of a matter of what is done with the content after it is taken that truly matters most.

        • TimeSquirrel
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          113 months ago

          Generative AI is not going back into the bag. If not OpenAI, then someone else will control it. So we deal with them the next best way, force them to serve us, the people.

          • Admiral Patrick
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            253 months ago

            Then they can either pay for the copyrighted data they want to train on or lobby for copyright to be reigned in for everyone. Right now, they’re acting like entitled twats with a shit business model demanding they get a free pass while the rest of us would be bankrupted for downloading a Metallica MP3.

            • ArchRecord
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              43 months ago

              I think this better solves the issue.

              The problem isn’t necessarily the use of copyrighted works, (although it can be a problem in many ways) it’s the unfair legal determination of who is allowed to do so.

          • @[email protected]
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            133 months ago

            Nobody should profit from copyright violation. Yes, copyright law needs to change, but making money isn’t an exception

          • @leftzero
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            33 months ago

            Generative AI is not going back into the bag.

            It probably will, though, once model collapse sets in.

            That’s the irony, really… the more successful it is, the sooner it’ll poison itself to death.

    • @[email protected]
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      103 months ago

      K, so Google should be shut down too?

      They can’t operate without scraping copyrighted data.

      • @[email protected]
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        3 months ago

        This is a false equivalency.

        Google used to act as a directory for the internet along with other web search services. In court, they argued that the content they scrapped wasn’t easily accessible through the searches alone and had statistical proof that the search engine was helping bring people to more websites, not preventing them from going. At the time, they were right. This was the “good” era of Google, a different time period and company entirely.

        Since then, Google has parsed even more data, made that data easily available in the google search results pages directly (avoiding link click-throughs), increased the number of services they provide to the degree that they have a conflict of interest on the data they collect and a vested interest in keeping people “on google” and off the other parts of the web, and participated in the same bullshit policies that OpenAI started with their Gemini project. Whatever win they had in the 2000s against book publishers, it could be argued that the rights they were “afforded” back in those days were contingent on them being good-faith participants and not competitors. OpenAI and “summary” models that fail to reference sources with direct links, make hugely inaccurate statements, and generate “infinite content” by mashing together letters in the worlds most complicated markov chain fit in this category.

        It turns out, if you’re afforded the rights to something on a technicality, it’s actually pretty dumb to become brazen and assume that you can push these rights to the breaking point.

      • Admiral Patrick
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        203 months ago

        Google (and search engines in general) is at least providing a service by indexing and making discoverable the websites they crawl. OpenAI is is just hoovering up the data and providing nothing in return. Socializing the cost, privatizing the profits.

        • @[email protected]
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          Uh, that’s objectively false.

          OoenAI also provides ChatGPT as a “free” service, and Google has made billions off of that “free” service they oh so altruistically provide you.

          • teft
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            263 months ago

            Google points to your content so others can find it.

            OpenAI scrapes your content to use to make more content.

            • @[email protected]
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              33 months ago

              That’s not a meaningful distinction, I spent all day using a Copilot search engine because the answers I wanted were scattered across a bunch of different documentation sites.

              It was both using the AI models to interpret my commands (not generation at all), and then only publishes content to me specifically.

              • teft
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                133 months ago

                I’m talking about the training phase of LLMs.that is the portion that is doing the scraping and generation of copy written data.

                You using an already trained LLM to do some searches is not the same thing.

              • ℍ𝕂-𝟞𝟝
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                123 months ago

                Technically it is meaningful, fair use is for specifically things that don’t replace the original in function.

                • @[email protected]
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                  23 months ago

                  Depends on what the function was. If the function was to drive ad revenue to your site, then sure, if the function was to get information into the public, then it’s not replacing the function so much as altering and updating it.

                • @[email protected]
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                  3 months ago

                  A) An LLM does not inherently sell you anything. Some companies charge you to run and use their LLMs (OpenAI), and some companies publish their LLMs open source for anyone to use (Meta, Microsoft). With neural chips starting to pop in PCs and phones, pretty soon anyone will be able to run an open source LLM locally on their machine, completely for free.

                  B) LLMs still rarely regurgitate the exact same original source. This would be more like someone in the back alley putting on their own performance of the movie and morphing it and adjusting it in real time based on your prompts and comments, which is a lot closer to parody and fair use than blatant piracy.

    • @[email protected]
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      73 months ago

      This is actually a very good comparison because restaurants use this argument all the time, except for wages:

      “I can’t make money running my restaurant if I have to pay a living wage to my servers, so you should pay them with tips. How else can we stay open?”

      These business that can’t operate profitably like any other business should fail.

      • Karyoplasma
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        13 months ago

        In China, tipping is considered insulting because you are implying exactly that: that they are incapable of running their business without your donation.

  • magnetosphere
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    1953 months ago

    In every other circumstance I can think of, “I can’t make money doing a thing unless I break the law” means don’t do that thing.

    Why should AI get special treatment?

        • @[email protected]
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          163 months ago

          Now about that fake money for criminals - it was quite useful for me when I needed to send money to my sister, with me being in Russia and her being outside, and it was year 2022. Also with the way ruble sank after the war, buying BTC hours after seeing news of it starting was probably a bargain. Would be twice as expensive the next day.

          I haven’t used Uber (Yandex Taxi) and Airbnb (asocial type and have responsibilities), and I agree about the plagiarism machine.

          • rautapekoni
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            3 months ago

            So you didn’t do the crime, but your home country did, and you could use crypto to make life easier despite the repercussions. I’d say it’s not a bad fit.

            • @[email protected]
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              23 months ago

              Nah. Arbitrary shit that doesn’t hurt those who did the crime, but does hurt me, is not repercussions. Neither is it a crime to find tools to solve such problems.

          • @[email protected]
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            13 months ago

            Sorry to break it to you, but bypassing sections is a crime. You just proved his point. Sanctions are supposed to make life difficult for the people in sanctioned countries so that those people maybe start doing something to the person causing the problems.

            It may be useful, but it was designed to facilitate criminal payments.

            • @[email protected]
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              13 months ago

              Sanctions are supposed to make life difficult for the people in sanctioned countries so that those people maybe start doing something to the person causing the problems.

              Nah. They are supposed to reduce connectivity for everyone except the right people with connections, who deal in shit big enough, like oil, gas etc, but not us serfs and not businessmen who don’t respect their government officials enough to bribe them. This worked especially well in the Iron Curtain times, and it seems there are people nostalgic of that now.

              First, spitting into my soup for something other people did is not going to make me more pissed at them (suppose I already was), it’s going to make me more pissed at those spitting into my soup.

              Second, knowing that Israel isn’t sanctioned, Turkey isn’t sanctioned, Azerbaijan isn’t sanctioned, but Russia is, not being better, makes it extremely hard to believe that those sanctions are meant to solve problems. Even if I didn’t know how they work.

              Third, a country can’t make something a crime outside their jurisdiction.

      • @[email protected]
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        283 months ago

        Ah yes, the original unviable silicon valley businesses! I love how they used their VC money to undercut and kill small businesses all over the world.

      • @[email protected]
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        23 months ago

        AirBNB is currently failing. Uber likely will when people catch on to “dynamic pricing”

    • @[email protected]
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      43 months ago

      The more the original work is transformed, the more likely it is to be considered fair use rather than infringement.

  • kn0wmad1c
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    3 months ago

    Cool. If OpenAI gets a pass, then piracy should be legal, right? I mean what good is a trademark or copyright law?

    Edit: “I can’t make money without stealing other people’s work” is definitely a take

    • @[email protected]
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      613 months ago

      No, see, piracy is just you downloading movies for yourself. To be like OpenAI you need to download it, put it in a pretty package with a bow, then sell it over and over again. Only when it’s piracy for profit do you get to beg and plead for a pass.

      • @[email protected]
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        203 months ago

        But I’m an aspiring artist, without pirating thousands of movies and TV shows, I’ll never make my ‘highly profitable’ magnum opus!

        • @[email protected]
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          33 months ago

          I’m an aspiring dead beat, with out food to provide basic biochemical energy I’ll never beat any dead.

      • @[email protected]
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        143 months ago

        You skipped a crucial step: first you gotta raise a few hundred million in VC funding from Silicon Valley bigwigs!

      • Karyoplasma
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        43 months ago

        So if I download a movie and use a voice changer to change all the dialog to sound like the donkey from Shrek, I should be good.

    • @[email protected]
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      23 months ago

      You’re not repackaging and selling it on for profit tho. That’s different and thus illegal because reasons

  • @[email protected]
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    3 months ago

    then perish

    If I was exempt from copyright, I too could easily make oodles of money

  • teft
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    3 months ago

    Sounds like an argument slave owners would use. “My plantation can’t make money without free labor!”

    • @[email protected]
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      173 months ago

      How do you think slave owners got bailouts after the 13th amendment was passed and the slaves got freed?

      • WHYAREWEALLCAPS
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        123 months ago

        They used that part of the 13th that said “Well, except prisoners, those can be slaves.” Local law enforcement rounded up former slaves on trumped up charges and leased them back to the same plantation owners they were freed from. Only now if they escaped they were “escaped criminals” and they could count on even northern law enforcement returning them. The US is still a pro-slavery country and will be as long as that part of the 13th amendment stands.

      • @[email protected]
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        83 months ago

        Reminds me of that time the Federal government granted land parcels to a bunch of former slaves (using land from plantations) and then rescinded them again.

    • @[email protected]
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      113 months ago

      Copying information is not the same thing as stealing, let alone forcing people into slavery.

      • qprimed
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        appreciate the important reality check, but I think the parent was just highlighting the absurdity of the original argument with hyperbole.

        people are in jail for doing exactly what this company is doing. either enforce the laws equally (!) or change them (whatever that means in late stage capitalism).

        • @[email protected]
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          103 months ago

          Let’s advocate for no one going to prison for scraping information then. Let’s pick the second one where we don’t put more people into prison.

    • sunzu2
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      63 months ago

      My plantation can’t make money without everybody’s labour.

    • @[email protected]
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      53 months ago

      The current generation of data hungry AI models with energy requirements of a small country should be replaced ASAP, so if copyright laws spur innovation in that direction I am all for it.

  • @[email protected]
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    893 months ago

    I can’t make money without using OpenAI’s paid products for free.

    Checkmate motherfucker

  • @[email protected]
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    843 months ago

    “Limiting training data to public domain books and drawings created more than a century ago might yield an interesting experiment, but would not provide AI systems that meet the needs of today’s citizens.”

    exactly which “needs” are they trying to meet?

  • @[email protected]
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    813 months ago

    Boo fucking hoo. Everyone else has to make licensing agreements for this kind of shit, pay up.

  • @[email protected]
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    3 months ago

    If a company cannot do business without breaking the law it simply is a criminal organisation. RICO act, anyone?