Aren’t MP3s just a statistical correlation?
Besides, you really don’t need to zoom in on “but muh license agreement” to roast these AI turds.
They’re very clear: We’re gonna put creatives out of work, we’re gonna sell a unified product to replace them, and we’re gonna use their own labor to build their replacements.
That’s anticompetitive.
Nail em on that instead of trying to thread the needle on reining in the tech lords without damaging e.g. linguistic analysis researchers.
We’re gonna put creatives out of work, we’re gonna sell a unified product to replace them, and we’re gonna use their own labor to build their replacements.
Yes, but: it’s short sighted, and wrong. Until we have a sea change in the LLM/AGI space, “creatives” will be needed for seed data. LLMs that are recursively trained on their own output degrade and produce worse output over time.
The “yes” part is that companies looking to replace paying people for their work, but still hoping that Creative Commons types are still posting online for free harvesting.
Torrents are just statistical correlations to our torrent clients.
Siri create a random dataset in the likeness of peter jacksons lord of the rings: the return of the king directors cut on dvd
These files are just correlated bits and bytes, nothing more.
Why not go full data nihilist and say that every file is just a natural number expressed in binary.
What about copyrighted code?
Like for instance, GPU drivers?Yes, that would also be statistical correlations to an AI model. The specific kind of information they’re being trained on doesn’t affect the underlying mechanism of model training.
I mentioned it before:
If they use any GPL code for their model then any output would be a derived work and a violation of the GPL.
Copies are just very strong statistical correlations.
Yeah I’m just downloading random data for fun in little tiny bits. If that data happens to arrange itself in the form of the latest episode of Doctor Who then that’s not my problem.
Damn, this article is so biased.









