2008, me: I love the idea of cryptocurrencyBITCOIN: The word "cryptocurrency" now means "financial scams based on inefficient write-only ledgers"2018, me: I love the idea of the metaverseFACEBOOK: The word "metaverse" now means "proprietary 3D chat pro...
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Irenes (many)replied to Irenes (many) on last edited by
@mcc we definitely think that copyright as a tool for building a better world has bent the structure of capitalism as far as it is going to. we can't afford to REMOVE that crowbar, and in fact we should probably be coming up with more radical copyleft + non-commercial + anti-war licenses, but enforcement is going to keep favoring large power structures, not individuals.
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Irenes (many)replied to Irenes (many) on last edited by
@mcc (the point of making ever-more-radical licenses is to stay ahead of capitalist attempts to subsume critique into itself)
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@datarama @mcc @mark @gsuberland there is one upside to forcing these models to be open and it's that it removes one of the, of not the primary, incentives in developing them in the first place. Yes, they could still sell its execution as a service, but if they lose control of the model itself, it becomes a considerably less profitable endeavor.
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@oblomov @mcc @mark @gsuberland How, though?
Let's say that tomorrow, a judge rules that GPT-4 is not covered by copyright. What has actually changed? OpenAI isn't compelled to share it with anyone, and it's too big for anyone except large and wealthy corporations to actually do anything with.
Sure, you couldn't get sued if you got a bittorrent of it somehow. But you're not getting a bittorrent of a 1.76 trillion parameter neural network anyway.
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dataramareplied to Graham Sutherland / Polynomial on last edited by
@gsuberland @mcc This isn't why the AI craze has made me anxious, but it *is* why I have become terribly depressed.
I like writing code and making various weird computer programs, and sharing them with people for mutual entertainment and occasional enlightenment. Now I can't do that without accepting that everything I do will be appropriated and commoditized by some of the most horrible people in tech, unless I do it in secret.
And then what's the point?
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@datarama @oblomov @mcc @mark @gsuberland 1.76 trillion parameters is about a hard drive's worth of data, no?
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@datarama @gsuberland @mcc > And then what's the point?
I'm feeling exactly the same way and I'm really struggling with it.
Not just code but blog posts/tutorials as well. I've "lost" my main creative outlets.
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@mcc @csolisr @datarama I see what you're saying. It's really tough that it's all gone so bad. The potential here for good is insane and yet because of the immense success of a single company (and the failure to regulate their unlicensed use of this data) the business model for this technology may simply be as exploitative as possible going forward.
If I'm honest it leaves me wanting to jump ship. But then again, all of this could change on the basis of a single court case.
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@spaduf @csolisr @datarama Not especially looking forward to it because (1) a court case with a "positive" outcome would probably strengthen copyright in general, which I would consider bad for me and (2) In a world where AI tech is already established but a copyright regime where models are unambiguously derivative works is introduced, the biggest name in AI suddenly becomes Disney
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dataramareplied to crzwdjk ✅ on last edited by [email protected]
@crzwdjk @oblomov @mcc @mark @gsuberland It is, but that's *still* beside the point. You can't actually do anything with it unless you have the resources of a large corporation.
And my other point was that just because it isn't copyrighted, they can still keep it secret.
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@asmaloney @gsuberland @mcc That's where I'm at too.
And I have never been as depressed as I have this last year. For every other awful period in my life, I always had creative computer things to fall back on - literally, that has been how I kept from going too crazy in the entire story from "tiny bullied autistic kid" to "middle-aged guy holed up all alone during a pandemic". There was always coding and writing.
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@asmaloney @gsuberland @mcc Coding feels especially meaningless now. I try to convince myself that even after we all get fired and replaced with shitty AI, we could still do it for fun - but it's not fun when you know all you're really doing is providing more free training data for the same assholes who are actively working to destroy your life.
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@datarama "middle-aged guy holed up all alone during a pandemic"
I feel seen (as the kids say these days).
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@asmaloney I sometimes think about how much that particular experience has coloured the rest of my experience of this bleak, bleak decade. I sat at home with nearly no social contact for 1½ years (except what came in through Teams), and even if I'm a bit of an introvert, I'm sure it made me a bit crazy.