- cross-posted to:
- technology@beehaw.org
- chatgpt@lemdro.id
- cross-posted to:
- technology@beehaw.org
- chatgpt@lemdro.id
You know… Instead of having AI create art while humans bust their asses at work, why not make AI do the work and let humans create art?
Because then people wouldn’t pay out the ass for small conveniences. Keeping people working as much as possible is the point.
Because it can
AI makes the art, so we have more time for work.
I apologize for the inconvenience, but as an AI language model, I don’t have direct access to books or copyrighted materials like “The Bedwetter” by Sarah Silverman.
Pack it up, guys!
On a serious note corporations abusing authors’ copyrighted work is on an entire different level to civilian piracy and I hope they get seriously shafted over it. Same thing for Bing and Bard. All of chatGPT is built on dubious or outright illegal datasets and there is no reason huge multinationals shouldn’t at least pay and inform the authors of those works. But in reality the blame will probably be shifted to the libraries.
More detailed coverage from The Verge: https://www.theverge.com/2023/7/9/23788741/sarah-silverman-openai-meta-chatgpt-llama-copyright-infringement-chatbots-artificial-intelligence-ai
The complaint lays out in steps why the plaintiffs believe the datasets have illicit origins — in a Meta paper detailing LLaMA, the company points to sources for its training datasets, one of which is called ThePile, which was assembled by a company called EleutherAI. ThePile, the complaint points out, was described in an EleutherAI paper as being put together from “a copy of the contents of the Bibliotik private tracker.” Bibliotik and the other “shadow libraries” listed, says the lawsuit, are “flagrantly illegal.”
I used to have a Bibliotik account, and if this is true about ThePile, they very likely have at least the beginnings of a successful case.
Good. Fuck openai
Who? Like no sarcasm, who is she?
She’s the actress who played Rain Robinson in the Star Trek: Voyager third season episodes “Future’s End” and “Future’s End, Part II”.
(I guess she’s done some other stuff too, which you can read about in her wikipedia article…)
It’s not illegal for a human to learn from the contents of a book, so why the fuck it’s illegal for an AI?
Because the thing referred to as AI (which is definitely not AI) is simply strip mining the book to shit out “content.”
It is not reading, understanding, or learning from the book. It is using it to sell services for its masters.
An author should control their work. They should be able to decide for themselves whether or not they want to help big tech sell garbage to idiots.