The LLM is a tool. It’s like granting copyright to a paintbrush.
The LLM is a tool. It’s like granting copyright to a paintbrush.
That’s not what I meant by that. People should have the rights to the products they produce using the tools at their disposal.
I see a lot of Dunning Kruger here as well. The fact is that you can generate novel images/texts/whatever with these tools. They may mostly suck but they’re still novel so they can be copyrighted by whoever used these tools to create them.
Where did I ever say that a stupid AI should get any rights to its own product?
If it was a compression algorithm then it would be insanely efficient and that’d be the big thing about it. The simple fact is that they aren’t able to reproduce their exact training data so no, they aren’t storing it in a highly compressed form.
They are physically unable to just copy paste stuff. The models are tiny compared to the training data, they don’t store it.
Finally someone who gets it
The LLMs don’t deserve or have any rights. They’re a tool that people can use. Just like reference material, spellcheckers, asset libraries or whatever else creatives use. As long as they don’t actually violate copyright in the classical sense of just copy pasting stuff the product people generate using them is probably as (un)original as a lot of art out there. And collages can be transformative enough to qualify for copyright.
In reality people learn how to write lyrics because they listen to songs. Nobody writes a song without listening to thousands of them and many human written songs are really similar to each other. Otherwise the music industry wouldn’t be littered with lawsuits. I don’t really see the difference.
Of course they calculate quite well if it is worth the effort to get rid of fake reviews. I definitely think that they are something that Amazon would eradicate right now if they could do so easily. So as the quantity and quality of fake reviews is bound to rise with recent technological developments, the scales might tip into the direction of them having to do more about it. Because offering good deals as apology is not something that they’d be happy to do for more and more people.
Really? I think it’s not helping an online store if it’s review system can’t be trusted.
It gets worse? So you’d rather live in Victorian England? Is that what you’re saying?
Shin Bet is responsible
It’s not like there aren’t any trackers that lack any and all protection. I don’t really see the manufacturer at fault here.
Thanks, sad that they gave up though
Spectacle, it adds shortcuts to snap windows to half of the screen and stuff like that. I really like it. Also, DaisyDisk helps me a lot when looking for stuff taking much storage.
I really like Affinity, but I’m using it casually for my photography hobby
Yes, but not a really big one since people should learn how to deal with information and trustworthiness of them anyway
This is what people don’t get. Information is always unreliable when not from a trusted source. Just because it’s easier to generate that kind of information now doesn’t mean it’s a new problem.
Kind of a big jump