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  3. I've been saying "if AI is making you so productive then where is all this great new software" and I guess the answer is the software is out there it's just not great, it's terrible, and nobody is using it

I've been saying "if AI is making you so productive then where is all this great new software" and I guess the answer is the software is out there it's just not great, it's terrible, and nobody is using it

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  • mrgm@mastodon.socialM This user is from outside of this forum
    mrgm@mastodon.socialM This user is from outside of this forum
    mrgm@mastodon.social
    wrote sidst redigeret af
    #91

    @dome @0x0961h @jargoggles @eniko Did you just post text an LLM gave you? Pull your head out of your ass and type your own response.

    1 Reply Last reply
    0
    • spitfire@mastodon.deS spitfire@mastodon.de

      @eniko AI enjoyers always react very emotional to criticism 😭

      landa@graz.socialL This user is from outside of this forum
      landa@graz.socialL This user is from outside of this forum
      landa@graz.social
      wrote sidst redigeret af
      #92

      @spitfire
      Oh yes.
      Even a simple „I don’t use them“ so often either makes them turn on a missionary spiel or pester me for some kind of endorsement for their particular usage pattern.

      I won’t react positively to either. It’s weirding me out.

      @eniko

      1 Reply Last reply
      0
      • brooke@bikeshed.vibber.netB brooke@bikeshed.vibber.net

        @alice @eniko 🔥 🐶 ☕ 🔥 this is fine

        octaviaconamore@cutie.cityO This user is from outside of this forum
        octaviaconamore@cutie.cityO This user is from outside of this forum
        octaviaconamore@cutie.city
        wrote sidst redigeret af
        #93

        @brooke @alice @eniko ← where I wish sloperators were put

        1 Reply Last reply
        0
        • gabrielesvelto@mas.toG gabrielesvelto@mas.to

          @troed not the same thing and you know it. People looking at things and storing copies of someone else's potentially copyrighted data for training are two completely different things. Is it so hard to admit that there are externalities and they are bad no matter how you slice it?

          Mistral AI is your run-of-the-mill AI company that does not disclose what's in their training sets, just like everybody else: https://help.mistral.ai/en/articles/347390-does-mistral-disclose-its-training-datasets

          offlib@mastodon.socialO This user is from outside of this forum
          offlib@mastodon.socialO This user is from outside of this forum
          offlib@mastodon.social
          wrote sidst redigeret af
          #94

          @gabrielesvelto @troed

          AI is being treated like that movie "Blood Diamond". I believe many are unaware, due to the loss of transparency, the costs involved to pull off that simple free prompt generation, which creators were stolen from, which towns had their houses demolished, or what resources were extracted for AI infrastructure.

          Quili.ai made an ethical point sitting in as a team of human AI prompt responders to save their town of water scarcity; revealing the community we have forgotten.

          1 Reply Last reply
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          • ahto@tiggi.esA ahto@tiggi.es

            @troed @gabrielesvelto

            > No, it doesn't "depends".

            Oh okay! I guess, it was silly of myself to assume some constraints. However, I guess you win this one!

            > If LLMs stored their training data we would apparently be able to compress all of human knowledge into files easily downloadable onto regular computers, since that's the size of LLM models.

            Oh okay! So... LLMs don't store them at all?

            > They don't. They do however learn and have better memories than human brains so they can indeed regurgitate 460 words in a row (that's from the paper you linked) from a source in some cases.

            But now you are saying they do? If they could regurgitate 460 words in a row, sounds like they stored it or have some kind of memory of it right?

            Like, that article was stating "reproduce up to 85-90% of held-out copyrighted books"

            So... there is some representation in which one could consider it looking like compression in which HEY, look at that:
            "A review of state-of-the-art techniques for large language model compression"

            https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s40747-025-02019-z

            troed@masto.sangberg.seT This user is from outside of this forum
            troed@masto.sangberg.seT This user is from outside of this forum
            troed@masto.sangberg.se
            wrote sidst redigeret af
            #95

            @ahto

            You're trying to argue against what amounts to natural laws, from your own lack of knowledge about the area.

            That's the same thing as climate deniers do.

            @gabrielesvelto

            gabrielesvelto@mas.toG ahto@tiggi.esA 2 Replies Last reply
            0
            • gabrielesvelto@mas.toG gabrielesvelto@mas.to

              @troed good, what do you know about modern neuroscience? Because you know what they say: extraordinary claims require extraordinary proof. And you claimed that LLMs memorize things like the human brain, can you prove it? Because @ahto provided one of several.peer reviewed articles that prove without question that LLMs store high-probability training data essentially verbatim. But you didn't provide proof that the human brain store sparse matrixes and multiplies them.

              troed@masto.sangberg.seT This user is from outside of this forum
              troed@masto.sangberg.seT This user is from outside of this forum
              troed@masto.sangberg.se
              wrote sidst redigeret af
              #96

              @gabrielesvelto

              I recommend Susan Blackmore's "Consciousness: An Introduction" and Douglas Hofstadters "I Am a Strange Loop" if you want more insight into moden neuroscience.

              @ahto

              gabrielesvelto@mas.toG 1 Reply Last reply
              0
              • troed@masto.sangberg.seT troed@masto.sangberg.se

                @ahto

                You're trying to argue against what amounts to natural laws, from your own lack of knowledge about the area.

                That's the same thing as climate deniers do.

                @gabrielesvelto

                gabrielesvelto@mas.toG This user is from outside of this forum
                gabrielesvelto@mas.toG This user is from outside of this forum
                gabrielesvelto@mas.to
                wrote sidst redigeret af
                #97

                @troed @ahto I guess you mean scientific laws because natural laws are a philosophical concept. I also suppose you meant climate *change* deniers which - besides being uncalled for name-calling - is a bit ironic given that worsening climate change is indeed one of the externalities. Anyway back to the case in point it's not about a handful of words, we now have plenty of literature proving that training data contains verbatim copies of high-probability inputs regardless of what Shannon's theorem says, e.g.:

                https://arxiv.org/pdf/2601.02671v1

                > For Claude 3.7 Sonnet, we were able to extract four whole books near-verbatim, including two books under copyright in the U.S.: Harry Potter and the Sorcerer’s Stone and 1984

                Anyway this brings me to another question. Why defending these systems in the face of the damage they do? Because you used them to write some software? That's your *expertise* that you used. That enabled you to do it, not the tool. That's the lie at the heart of these systems.

                troed@masto.sangberg.seT 1 Reply Last reply
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                • troed@masto.sangberg.seT troed@masto.sangberg.se

                  @gabrielesvelto

                  I recommend Susan Blackmore's "Consciousness: An Introduction" and Douglas Hofstadters "I Am a Strange Loop" if you want more insight into moden neuroscience.

                  @ahto

                  gabrielesvelto@mas.toG This user is from outside of this forum
                  gabrielesvelto@mas.toG This user is from outside of this forum
                  gabrielesvelto@mas.to
                  wrote sidst redigeret af
                  #98

                  @troed @ahto neither argues that the human mind stores symbolic data like computers do nor that it is able to retrieve that symbolic data and process it like computers do. You claimed that LLMs work like brains, not me, now it's time to show proof of that claim.

                  1 Reply Last reply
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                  • gabrielesvelto@mas.toG gabrielesvelto@mas.to

                    @troed @ahto I guess you mean scientific laws because natural laws are a philosophical concept. I also suppose you meant climate *change* deniers which - besides being uncalled for name-calling - is a bit ironic given that worsening climate change is indeed one of the externalities. Anyway back to the case in point it's not about a handful of words, we now have plenty of literature proving that training data contains verbatim copies of high-probability inputs regardless of what Shannon's theorem says, e.g.:

                    https://arxiv.org/pdf/2601.02671v1

                    > For Claude 3.7 Sonnet, we were able to extract four whole books near-verbatim, including two books under copyright in the U.S.: Harry Potter and the Sorcerer’s Stone and 1984

                    Anyway this brings me to another question. Why defending these systems in the face of the damage they do? Because you used them to write some software? That's your *expertise* that you used. That enabled you to do it, not the tool. That's the lie at the heart of these systems.

                    troed@masto.sangberg.seT This user is from outside of this forum
                    troed@masto.sangberg.seT This user is from outside of this forum
                    troed@masto.sangberg.se
                    wrote sidst redigeret af
                    #99

                    @gabrielesvelto "high-probability inputs" + "near verbatim" is the same as what humans can do (ask your nearest Quran-reciter).

                    "regardless of what Shannon's theorem says"

                    Yeah that's when it just becomes funny.

                    "You claimed that LLMs work like brains"

                    No, I wrote: "What happens in their neural networks is very similar to what happens in a human brain when learning"

                    Do you dispute that statement? What is it the whole field of neural networks is modelled after?

                    @ahto

                    gabrielesvelto@mas.toG 1 Reply Last reply
                    0
                    • troed@masto.sangberg.seT troed@masto.sangberg.se

                      @gabrielesvelto "high-probability inputs" + "near verbatim" is the same as what humans can do (ask your nearest Quran-reciter).

                      "regardless of what Shannon's theorem says"

                      Yeah that's when it just becomes funny.

                      "You claimed that LLMs work like brains"

                      No, I wrote: "What happens in their neural networks is very similar to what happens in a human brain when learning"

                      Do you dispute that statement? What is it the whole field of neural networks is modelled after?

                      @ahto

                      gabrielesvelto@mas.toG This user is from outside of this forum
                      gabrielesvelto@mas.toG This user is from outside of this forum
                      gabrielesvelto@mas.to
                      wrote sidst redigeret af
                      #100

                      @troed @ahto what humans can do and how information is stored are two different things and you're deliberately mixing up the concepts. Shannon's theorem is *specifically* about storage, so how do you want to slice this particular piece of bread?

                      That aside let's go back to your original extraordinary claim that neural networks learn like human brains: where's your proof? Your peer-reviewed proof complete with reproducible results? Because they really are nothing alike.

                      https://www.quantamagazine.org/ai-is-nothing-like-a-brain-and-thats-ok-20250430/

                      > But they’re not the same — and probably never will be. “[Neural networks] are now sufficiently different from the way that actual brains are in so many different ways that I think it’s actually more sensible to think of them as a really different information-processing object,” said Shine, the systems neurobiologist, “one that’s extremely interesting in its own right.”

                      troed@masto.sangberg.seT 1 Reply Last reply
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                      • gabrielesvelto@mas.toG gabrielesvelto@mas.to

                        @troed @ahto what humans can do and how information is stored are two different things and you're deliberately mixing up the concepts. Shannon's theorem is *specifically* about storage, so how do you want to slice this particular piece of bread?

                        That aside let's go back to your original extraordinary claim that neural networks learn like human brains: where's your proof? Your peer-reviewed proof complete with reproducible results? Because they really are nothing alike.

                        https://www.quantamagazine.org/ai-is-nothing-like-a-brain-and-thats-ok-20250430/

                        > But they’re not the same — and probably never will be. “[Neural networks] are now sufficiently different from the way that actual brains are in so many different ways that I think it’s actually more sensible to think of them as a really different information-processing object,” said Shine, the systems neurobiologist, “one that’s extremely interesting in its own right.”

                        troed@masto.sangberg.seT This user is from outside of this forum
                        troed@masto.sangberg.seT This user is from outside of this forum
                        troed@masto.sangberg.se
                        wrote sidst redigeret af
                        #101

                        @gabrielesvelto

                        "Shannon's theorem is *specifically* about storage"

                        Yes, that's the fact that disproves LLMs storing their training data verbatim. This is how you make a logic proof.

                        "let's go back to your original extraordinary claim that neural networks learn like human brains: where's your proof? Your peer-reviewed proof complete with reproducible results? Because they really are nothing alike."

                        Here's Google's paper from 2017 that is behind all the LLM architectures today:

                        https://arxiv.org/abs/1706.03762

                        Here's an explanation to how that's similar to human brains:

                        https://www.brown-tth.com/post/the-neural-network-in-our-heads-how-transformer-architectures-mirror-the-human-brain

                        I wrote my first back-propagating neural network in 1993. You?

                        @ahto

                        gabrielesvelto@mas.toG 1 Reply Last reply
                        0
                        • troed@masto.sangberg.seT troed@masto.sangberg.se

                          @ahto

                          You're trying to argue against what amounts to natural laws, from your own lack of knowledge about the area.

                          That's the same thing as climate deniers do.

                          @gabrielesvelto

                          ahto@tiggi.esA This user is from outside of this forum
                          ahto@tiggi.esA This user is from outside of this forum
                          ahto@tiggi.es
                          wrote sidst redigeret af
                          #102

                          @troed @gabrielesvelto

                          I asked about the domain, we could be talking about infinite sets, finite sets, where the alphabet is infinite, lossy and lossless and other kind of nuances here. Could have been asking about quantum mechanics here and error correction.

                          You got specific and attempted to portray a belief I never stated like so as well.

                          I was more open to things I may not have considered and read up on them. You wanted to try and flex, okay, that's fine.

                          > I get why you don't _want_ to answer, since the answer proves that with the laws of physics in this universe LLMs don't store copies of their training data.

                          Which is you speculating about things without evidence here.

                          To be pedantic here as well:

                          > Oh this isn't theory

                          I mean, I was off with measure theory but I guess it belongs to information theory here so not true.

                          > You're trying to argue against what amounts to natural laws, from your own lack of knowledge about the area.

                          No, I just outlined the works and I had cited work by academics who have done research in this area and have shown claims that it is able to be reconstructed and leading to the conclusion that they are encoding the data in some form.

                          troed@masto.sangberg.seT 1 Reply Last reply
                          0
                          • ahto@tiggi.esA ahto@tiggi.es

                            @troed @gabrielesvelto

                            I asked about the domain, we could be talking about infinite sets, finite sets, where the alphabet is infinite, lossy and lossless and other kind of nuances here. Could have been asking about quantum mechanics here and error correction.

                            You got specific and attempted to portray a belief I never stated like so as well.

                            I was more open to things I may not have considered and read up on them. You wanted to try and flex, okay, that's fine.

                            > I get why you don't _want_ to answer, since the answer proves that with the laws of physics in this universe LLMs don't store copies of their training data.

                            Which is you speculating about things without evidence here.

                            To be pedantic here as well:

                            > Oh this isn't theory

                            I mean, I was off with measure theory but I guess it belongs to information theory here so not true.

                            > You're trying to argue against what amounts to natural laws, from your own lack of knowledge about the area.

                            No, I just outlined the works and I had cited work by academics who have done research in this area and have shown claims that it is able to be reconstructed and leading to the conclusion that they are encoding the data in some form.

                            troed@masto.sangberg.seT This user is from outside of this forum
                            troed@masto.sangberg.seT This user is from outside of this forum
                            troed@masto.sangberg.se
                            wrote sidst redigeret af
                            #103

                            @ahto "they are encoding the data in some form."

                            Yes, they're creating lossy memories from the ingested training. That's what human brains also do.

                            Neither of us "store copies".

                            @gabrielesvelto

                            ahto@tiggi.esA 1 Reply Last reply
                            0
                            • troed@masto.sangberg.seT troed@masto.sangberg.se

                              @gabrielesvelto

                              "Shannon's theorem is *specifically* about storage"

                              Yes, that's the fact that disproves LLMs storing their training data verbatim. This is how you make a logic proof.

                              "let's go back to your original extraordinary claim that neural networks learn like human brains: where's your proof? Your peer-reviewed proof complete with reproducible results? Because they really are nothing alike."

                              Here's Google's paper from 2017 that is behind all the LLM architectures today:

                              https://arxiv.org/abs/1706.03762

                              Here's an explanation to how that's similar to human brains:

                              https://www.brown-tth.com/post/the-neural-network-in-our-heads-how-transformer-architectures-mirror-the-human-brain

                              I wrote my first back-propagating neural network in 1993. You?

                              @ahto

                              gabrielesvelto@mas.toG This user is from outside of this forum
                              gabrielesvelto@mas.toG This user is from outside of this forum
                              gabrielesvelto@mas.to
                              wrote sidst redigeret af
                              #104

                              @troed @ahto

                              > Yes, that's the fact that disproves LLMs storing their training data verbatim. This is how you make a logic proof.

                              Really? Here's a type of lossless storage that respects Shannon's theorem while storing verbatim data: I scrape X data off the internet, I can keep only Y data where Y < X. I throw away all non-copyrighted material until I get only Y data. Shannon's theorem was respected and I have verbatim data that I am now distributing without consent, attribution or compensation.

                              > https://
                              arxiv.org/abs/1706.03762

                              This contains exactly zero proof that LLMs and brains operate alike.

                              gabrielesvelto@mas.toG 1 Reply Last reply
                              0
                              • gabrielesvelto@mas.toG gabrielesvelto@mas.to

                                @troed @ahto

                                > Yes, that's the fact that disproves LLMs storing their training data verbatim. This is how you make a logic proof.

                                Really? Here's a type of lossless storage that respects Shannon's theorem while storing verbatim data: I scrape X data off the internet, I can keep only Y data where Y < X. I throw away all non-copyrighted material until I get only Y data. Shannon's theorem was respected and I have verbatim data that I am now distributing without consent, attribution or compensation.

                                > https://
                                arxiv.org/abs/1706.03762

                                This contains exactly zero proof that LLMs and brains operate alike.

                                gabrielesvelto@mas.toG This user is from outside of this forum
                                gabrielesvelto@mas.toG This user is from outside of this forum
                                gabrielesvelto@mas.to
                                wrote sidst redigeret af
                                #105

                                @troed

                                > https://www.
                                brown-tth.com/post/the-neural-network-in-our-heads-how-transformer-architectures-mirror-the-human-brain

                                From your second link:

                                > Still, at the end of the day, the brain is far more complex than even the most advanced neural networks today. The brain has 100 billion neurons and 100 trillion connections, compared to Transformers with billions of parameters. The brain also develops its connections over years of growth and learning, whereas Transformers are trained for a limited time on a fixed dataset. The brain is the result of evolution, while humans design Transformers. As researchers put it: “the brain is trained with a recurrent architecture and on a relatively small amount of grounded sentences, while transformers are trained with a massive feedforward architecture and on huge text databases.”

                                Did you actually read it before posting it?

                                troed@masto.sangberg.seT 1 Reply Last reply
                                0
                                • troed@masto.sangberg.seT troed@masto.sangberg.se

                                  @ahto "they are encoding the data in some form."

                                  Yes, they're creating lossy memories from the ingested training. That's what human brains also do.

                                  Neither of us "store copies".

                                  @gabrielesvelto

                                  ahto@tiggi.esA This user is from outside of this forum
                                  ahto@tiggi.esA This user is from outside of this forum
                                  ahto@tiggi.es
                                  wrote sidst redigeret af
                                  #106

                                  @troed @gabrielesvelto

                                  Oh ffs - This is embarrassing for you dude but thank you for finally coming around to admitting it.

                                  Would replication be a better word instead of copy? Given that exact copies and lossy versions are reconstructable and resembling training material.

                                  However, your argument amounts to the napster one ("But sir, it is an MP3, it is a different from the original"), this not something that is entertained seriously.

                                  Many people are aware of that this happens. Upon review, I did think about the interpretation of "copy" in this conversation and entertained both versions of it being "lossless" and "lossy".

                                  However, both are covered here and I think what this argument culminates to is that:

                                  You are comfortable with the idea of LLMs having some lossy encoding (regardless if it is minor or not or if it can reconstruct the original, you seem to value an excuse for whatever reason).

                                  All this under the guise that "it is like how we learn" which you are lacking some definitive proof here.

                                  I'll chalk up that some of the papers you linked have made some interesting points and have value to how we learn but they are not remotely providing the assertion you are making here.

                                  ---

                                  Look,

                                  If you want to use code that you did not write, from a machine made by someone who didn't ask for majority of the authors consent to use, under an excuse that it is 'lossy' - Fine, I don't control you.

                                  However, people probably aren't going to respect you because you clearly do not respect other people or their work.

                                  troed@masto.sangberg.seT 1 Reply Last reply
                                  0
                                  • gabrielesvelto@mas.toG gabrielesvelto@mas.to

                                    @troed

                                    > https://www.
                                    brown-tth.com/post/the-neural-network-in-our-heads-how-transformer-architectures-mirror-the-human-brain

                                    From your second link:

                                    > Still, at the end of the day, the brain is far more complex than even the most advanced neural networks today. The brain has 100 billion neurons and 100 trillion connections, compared to Transformers with billions of parameters. The brain also develops its connections over years of growth and learning, whereas Transformers are trained for a limited time on a fixed dataset. The brain is the result of evolution, while humans design Transformers. As researchers put it: “the brain is trained with a recurrent architecture and on a relatively small amount of grounded sentences, while transformers are trained with a massive feedforward architecture and on huge text databases.”

                                    Did you actually read it before posting it?

                                    troed@masto.sangberg.seT This user is from outside of this forum
                                    troed@masto.sangberg.seT This user is from outside of this forum
                                    troed@masto.sangberg.se
                                    wrote sidst redigeret af
                                    #107

                                    @gabrielesvelto Yes? I'm sorry, maybe you're trying to move the goalposts?

                                    1 Reply Last reply
                                    0
                                    • ahto@tiggi.esA ahto@tiggi.es

                                      @troed @gabrielesvelto

                                      Oh ffs - This is embarrassing for you dude but thank you for finally coming around to admitting it.

                                      Would replication be a better word instead of copy? Given that exact copies and lossy versions are reconstructable and resembling training material.

                                      However, your argument amounts to the napster one ("But sir, it is an MP3, it is a different from the original"), this not something that is entertained seriously.

                                      Many people are aware of that this happens. Upon review, I did think about the interpretation of "copy" in this conversation and entertained both versions of it being "lossless" and "lossy".

                                      However, both are covered here and I think what this argument culminates to is that:

                                      You are comfortable with the idea of LLMs having some lossy encoding (regardless if it is minor or not or if it can reconstruct the original, you seem to value an excuse for whatever reason).

                                      All this under the guise that "it is like how we learn" which you are lacking some definitive proof here.

                                      I'll chalk up that some of the papers you linked have made some interesting points and have value to how we learn but they are not remotely providing the assertion you are making here.

                                      ---

                                      Look,

                                      If you want to use code that you did not write, from a machine made by someone who didn't ask for majority of the authors consent to use, under an excuse that it is 'lossy' - Fine, I don't control you.

                                      However, people probably aren't going to respect you because you clearly do not respect other people or their work.

                                      troed@masto.sangberg.seT This user is from outside of this forum
                                      troed@masto.sangberg.seT This user is from outside of this forum
                                      troed@masto.sangberg.se
                                      wrote sidst redigeret af
                                      #108

                                      @ahto

                                      "people probably aren't going to respect because you clearly do not respect other people or their work."

                                      The anti-AI fanatics are exactly like antivaxxers. They believe they know the Truth and that all others agree with them except for those in some big conspiracy.

                                      You're just wrong.

                                      (You also don't seem to know that lossy encoding doesn't recreate the source verbatim. This fits with you seemingly having entered this debate without actually having any knowledge about the subject matter. Cue climate denier comparison)

                                      @gabrielesvelto

                                      ahto@tiggi.esA 1 Reply Last reply
                                      0
                                      • troed@masto.sangberg.seT troed@masto.sangberg.se

                                        @ahto

                                        "people probably aren't going to respect because you clearly do not respect other people or their work."

                                        The anti-AI fanatics are exactly like antivaxxers. They believe they know the Truth and that all others agree with them except for those in some big conspiracy.

                                        You're just wrong.

                                        (You also don't seem to know that lossy encoding doesn't recreate the source verbatim. This fits with you seemingly having entered this debate without actually having any knowledge about the subject matter. Cue climate denier comparison)

                                        @gabrielesvelto

                                        ahto@tiggi.esA This user is from outside of this forum
                                        ahto@tiggi.esA This user is from outside of this forum
                                        ahto@tiggi.es
                                        wrote sidst redigeret af
                                        #109

                                        @troed @gabrielesvelto

                                        Okay, you can believe whatever you want .

                                        The conclusion is funny but quite a bit sad on your front. I do sincerely hope you reflect on this whole thing but I doubt you will.

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                                        • troed@masto.sangberg.seT troed@masto.sangberg.se

                                          @gabrielesvelto

                                          If you want to make completely different points to the one answered - sure!

                                          Has any artist ever compensated another from having looked at their paintings while learning to draw?

                                          Has any budding coder ever compensated others when having studied their code to learn how to do things?

                                          I'm all for lambasting shitty tech bro AI companies, but that's not the same as claiming that any and all LLM usage is bad. I suggest looking at Mistral AI as a european company that's building datacenters using fully renewable energy and ethically sourced data.

                                          @ZanaGB

                                          zanagb@lgbtqia.spaceZ This user is from outside of this forum
                                          zanagb@lgbtqia.spaceZ This user is from outside of this forum
                                          zanagb@lgbtqia.space
                                          wrote sidst redigeret af
                                          #110

                                          @troed @gabrielesvelto

                                          As artists who will happily share what we have with others and economically support other artists when possible, your attempt at an argument is sickening.

                                          Art is not a transaction, you talk to the artists, they teach you how things work, you figure out things and you decompose their work, you create, you have joy, you get frustrated, it has meaning, it has purpose, it is the journey in on itself. By learning how an artist tackles a problem you are not literally ripping off their art and grafting it ransom letter-style into some other art with pieces of other artists.

                                          You say you are a demoscener. What the fuck happened to you? To the joy of creation, to seeing the machine come alive, to coming along with friends and have some dude draw some graphics while another friend bangs the tunes and have everyone coalesce into a beautiful piece of work being orchestrated by a machine the public at large forgot? what happened about telling a story, about doing art where the computer is merely the medium? what happened to that? Who hurt you?

                                          Or it did not happen, because as with many people out there, y'all saw the demoscene not as an art, and just as a way to show off and measure your own e-peens for some cash prize while internalizing crunch culture that game publishers oh-so-desperately craved to normalize in the 90s?

                                          The future is here now, old man, and the future gives no shits about slavery-plagiarism machines y'all try to shove down people's throats. People don't want software for the sake of having software.

                                          By mere definition there is no such thing as an ethical LLM or image generator.

                                          troed@masto.sangberg.seT 1 Reply Last reply
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