lakemalcom10

joined 2 years ago
[–] lakemalcom10@lemm.ee 26 points 2 weeks ago

If you paid someone to study a million books and write a novel in the style of some other author you have not violated any law. The same is true if you hire an artist to copy another artist's style. So why is it illegal if an AI does it? Why is it wrong?

I think this is intentionally missing the point.

LLMs don't actually think, or produce original ideas. If the human artist produces a work that too closely resembles a copyrighted work, then they will be subject to those laws. LLMs are not capable of producing new works, by definition they are 100% derivative. But their methods in doing so intentionally obfuscate attribution and allow anyone to flood a space with works that require actual humans to identify the copyright violations.

[–] lakemalcom10@lemm.ee 31 points 2 weeks ago

However, if I use a copier to copy a book then start selling or giving away those copies that's my problem: I would've violated copyright law. However, is it Xerox's problem? Did they do anything wrong by making a device that can copy books?

This is false equivalence

LLMs do not wholesale reproduce an original work in it's original form, they make it easy to mass produce a slightly altered form without any way to identify the original attribution.

[–] lakemalcom10@lemm.ee 46 points 2 weeks ago

Search engines work because they can download and store everyone's copyrighted works without permission. If you take away that ability, we'd all lose the ability to search the Internet.

No they don't. They index the content of the page and score its relevance and reliability, and still provide the end user with the actual original information

[–] lakemalcom10@lemm.ee 15 points 2 weeks ago (2 children)

For 1 they actually addressed that: The system then translates the speech and maintains the expressive qualities and volume of each speaker’s voice while running on a device, such mobile devices with an Apple M2 chip like laptops and Apple Vision Pro. (The team avoided using cloud computing because of the privacy concerns with voice cloning.) Finally, when speakers move their heads, the system continues to track the direction and qualities of their voices as they change.

[–] lakemalcom10@lemm.ee 47 points 3 weeks ago (2 children)

One thing that's always missing from these is people naming where they got their information from. Sure, she says that Trump said this or that, and all of us can easily say: well if course he didn't. We don't just have a problem with people not connecting the dots, we have major propaganda and misinformation issues. She probably read on Facebook or watched something on Tiktok that said this. Was it Russian operatives? Was it just Fox news? There are so many bad sources out there.

[–] lakemalcom10@lemm.ee 11 points 3 weeks ago

Done! Thank you for the link.

[–] lakemalcom10@lemm.ee 12 points 3 weeks ago (23 children)

Interested in hearing about the right wing bent of Bttf and die hard

[–] lakemalcom10@lemm.ee 21 points 3 weeks ago

I found a page about how to run the activity and I think it's a pretty nice idea for a younger or multi-level troop: https://www.scouts.org.uk/activities/chippy-hike/

[–] lakemalcom10@lemm.ee 68 points 3 weeks ago (3 children)

Girl scouts (and girl guides) often have patches to commemorate a fun event. The ones they earn for work go on the front of their vest and have specific criteria for earning them, but are usually more generic in appearance or don't have details about it on the patch.

This type of patch is likely for the youngest age group (4-5) and is meant to be more of a fun patch. I would also guess that the troop is in more of an urban area so there's not much in the way of a very local, small kid friendly hike.

[–] lakemalcom10@lemm.ee 21 points 1 month ago (1 children)

As much as I appreciate a good "well actually", neither of the two mutants featured in the comic got their powers in utero.

 

It's a travesty that this video doesn't have many views. This is one of the oldest YouTube videos out there.

 

I basically never want to watch a YouTube link. But I kinda mindlessly click the next item in the feed if it sounds interesting and I'm always angry when it's a 20 minute long video that could have been a quick 2 minute read. Is it possible to mark these so I can see which ones are videos and avoid them like the plague?

 

I thought it might be a termite but I didn't think they had the thin body segment?

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