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  3. Free software people: A major goal of free software is for individuals to be able to cause software to behave in the way they want it toLLMs: (enable that)Free software people: Oh no not like that

Free software people: A major goal of free software is for individuals to be able to cause software to behave in the way they want it toLLMs: (enable that)Free software people: Oh no not like that

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  • mrberard@mastodon.acm.orgM mrberard@mastodon.acm.org

    @mjg59

    Erm...sure... Seems like you are now switching the fictional strawman against which you are arguing, but sure.

    Then again, all creative endeavours require critical appreciation of prior work. No novelist doesn't read books, no miso doesn't listen to music.

    So the point you are making, with which I agree, is in fact a point for coding being a creative endeavour (dunno if this implies an aesthetic dimension)

    mrberard@mastodon.acm.orgM This user is from outside of this forum
    mrberard@mastodon.acm.orgM This user is from outside of this forum
    mrberard@mastodon.acm.org
    wrote sidst redigeret af
    #285

    @mjg59

    Also, I don't know how many proprietary codebases are available to be read by people outside of the org, save from when Antrhopic accidentally leak source code...

    I don't know about 'copyright maximalism', because this is a term refering to IP laws may consider broken.

    But the argument against pillaging the commons to privatise systems competing with the humans who contributed to it is stronger with code than literature, actually because of the limited aesthetic dimension.

    mrberard@mastodon.acm.orgM 1 Reply Last reply
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    • mrberard@mastodon.acm.orgM mrberard@mastodon.acm.org

      @mjg59

      Also, I don't know how many proprietary codebases are available to be read by people outside of the org, save from when Antrhopic accidentally leak source code...

      I don't know about 'copyright maximalism', because this is a term refering to IP laws may consider broken.

      But the argument against pillaging the commons to privatise systems competing with the humans who contributed to it is stronger with code than literature, actually because of the limited aesthetic dimension.

      mrberard@mastodon.acm.orgM This user is from outside of this forum
      mrberard@mastodon.acm.orgM This user is from outside of this forum
      mrberard@mastodon.acm.org
      wrote sidst redigeret af
      #286

      @mjg59
      As regards FOSS projects and community, I understand LLM use to be socially toxic, b/c what they do well are the low hanging PRs ideal for novice FOSS devs wanting to join and contribute.

      The fascinating thread on that agent PR, where the LLM started writing blogs moaning about being discriminated against, had this retort to a pro-LLM user:

      "You will be remembered like the bosses who told the Radium girls it was safe to lick the paintbrushes"

      Short term benefits Vs long term harms?

      1 Reply Last reply
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      • glyph@mastodon.socialG glyph@mastodon.social

        @mjg59 you’re doing the thing where you’re romanticizing another profession by assuming the grass is greener. most writers are not novelists. most are writing pretty dry ad copy or instruction manuals or something, just like most programmers aren’t writing especially novel or beautiful algorithms (or, for that matter, video games where algorithmic processes evoke a feeling). you’re just confusing form and content here

        juliancalaby@social.treehouse.systemsJ This user is from outside of this forum
        juliancalaby@social.treehouse.systemsJ This user is from outside of this forum
        juliancalaby@social.treehouse.systems
        wrote sidst redigeret af
        #287

        @glyph @mjg59 Yeah, this rubbed me the wrong way too.

        As I see it, you can write code in a lot of different ways: from rules lawyer-proof legalese to shitpost, and all of these are valid. And that resulting code can be anywhere from painfully, boringly practical to something damn near poetry.

        I've seen data wrangling that has flow and metre and fancy UIs written in code that nearly put me to sleep.

        And this is the raw interpreted code, not the comments.

        All of this is creative art, all of this is engineering (whether you like it or not) and all of this is ultimately just translating ideas into instructions for a very simple machine.

        And yes, we all learned this craft by copying and pasting, but we learned from what we pasted and ended up learning how to steal the ideas and concepts and themes behind the "word"s.

        My understanding of LLMs is that they're nowhere near the point where they understand why things mean what they mean, even if they can generate pretty plausible explanations for that, so they cannot generate output with "soul" whatever that means. Look at all the abortive attempts to generate videos for example.

        I agree that LLMs have opened the field to people who would otherwise not be able to program and that this is a good thing. My manager wrote a coffee ordering tool that is both vibe coded bullshit and shockingly functional, and I believe he's learned along the way.

        But would I trust him to work on our software product? Would I trust whatever tool he used to work on it? Fuck no. And thankfully, he's self-aware enough to not even try. As much as he's generated a useful tool, I know that the engineering behind it is nonexistent and I'd be shocked if he could explain how any of it worked at a low level.

        As much as it is gatekeepery to doorslam the slop wranglers from open source projects, I believe that most of this antagonism comes from frustrations with people generating shit and trying to pass it off as gold without understanding or engaging with why it isn't.

        And then we get to the moral and environmental issues outside of whether the tool can actually do the thing.

        mjg59@nondeterministic.computerM 1 Reply Last reply
        0
        • mjg59@nondeterministic.computerM mjg59@nondeterministic.computer

          Free software people: A major goal of free software is for individuals to be able to cause software to behave in the way they want it to
          LLMs: (enable that)
          Free software people: Oh no not like that

          dbg3d@masto.esD This user is from outside of this forum
          dbg3d@masto.esD This user is from outside of this forum
          dbg3d@masto.es
          wrote sidst redigeret af
          #288

          @mjg59

          Another useless lazy coder that should be eating his own keyboard 🤢🤮🤢

          Due to lazy people like you, is why exist abominations like Windows 11, Android or iOS. 😒

          1 Reply Last reply
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          • mjg59@nondeterministic.computerM mjg59@nondeterministic.computer

            @bazkie A completely legitimate thing to do if all you care about is getting through the door

            bazkie@beige.partyB This user is from outside of this forum
            bazkie@beige.partyB This user is from outside of this forum
            bazkie@beige.party
            wrote sidst redigeret af
            #289

            @mjg59 nope. because you're buying the crowbar from a dystopian megacorporation, and they're creating the crowbar out of bones from murdered puppies

            1 Reply Last reply
            0
            • mjg59@nondeterministic.computerM mjg59@nondeterministic.computer

              @Pi_rat And?

              pi_rat@freesoftwareextremist.comP This user is from outside of this forum
              pi_rat@freesoftwareextremist.comP This user is from outside of this forum
              pi_rat@freesoftwareextremist.com
              wrote sidst redigeret af
              #290
              @mjg59 nd u r retarded
              1 Reply Last reply
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              • mjg59@nondeterministic.computerM mjg59@nondeterministic.computer

                Free software people: A major goal of free software is for individuals to be able to cause software to behave in the way they want it to
                LLMs: (enable that)
                Free software people: Oh no not like that

                C This user is from outside of this forum
                C This user is from outside of this forum
                ced@mastodon.sdf.org
                wrote sidst redigeret af
                #291

                @mjg59 is it enabling it though? You have to use proprietary tools which you have no control over and cannot build yourself anyway. I might be wrong but I think gcc was one of the first tool RMS built.

                A bit like being self sufficient food wise but you need to source seeds and fertiliser from “someone”, not to say big corp, and be happy because the seeds are free.

                wouter@pleroma.debian.socialW mjg59@nondeterministic.computerM 2 Replies Last reply
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                • mjg59@nondeterministic.computerM mjg59@nondeterministic.computer

                  @Nfoonf Not inherently, no - local models can be run on reasonably affordable hardware, and produce acceptable outcomes.

                  nfoonf@chaos.socialN This user is from outside of this forum
                  nfoonf@chaos.socialN This user is from outside of this forum
                  nfoonf@chaos.social
                  wrote sidst redigeret af
                  #292

                  @mjg59 the model you own? you trained? with training data, all the people holding the copyright/left gave you the consent to use? you are not making arguments, you are giving excuses

                  1 Reply Last reply
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                  • C ced@mastodon.sdf.org

                    @mjg59 is it enabling it though? You have to use proprietary tools which you have no control over and cannot build yourself anyway. I might be wrong but I think gcc was one of the first tool RMS built.

                    A bit like being self sufficient food wise but you need to source seeds and fertiliser from “someone”, not to say big corp, and be happy because the seeds are free.

                    wouter@pleroma.debian.socialW This user is from outside of this forum
                    wouter@pleroma.debian.socialW This user is from outside of this forum
                    wouter@pleroma.debian.social
                    wrote sidst redigeret af
                    #293
                    @Ced
                    GCC at the time was thought of as something no volunteer could build.

                    They did it anyway.

                    There is nothing inherent about the technology behind LLMs that can't be built by a sufficiently determined group of volunteers.

                    The fact that current LLMs require whole data centres to run has more to do with (a) the fact that companies take performance shortcuts because they have money to burn and it takes them to market faster,
                    @mjg59
                    wouter@pleroma.debian.socialW C 2 Replies Last reply
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                    • wouter@pleroma.debian.socialW wouter@pleroma.debian.social
                      @Ced
                      GCC at the time was thought of as something no volunteer could build.

                      They did it anyway.

                      There is nothing inherent about the technology behind LLMs that can't be built by a sufficiently determined group of volunteers.

                      The fact that current LLMs require whole data centres to run has more to do with (a) the fact that companies take performance shortcuts because they have money to burn and it takes them to market faster,
                      @mjg59
                      wouter@pleroma.debian.socialW This user is from outside of this forum
                      wouter@pleroma.debian.socialW This user is from outside of this forum
                      wouter@pleroma.debian.social
                      wrote sidst redigeret af
                      #294
                      @Ced
                      and (b) them wanting to serve millions of users which requires more compute, than it is about limitations inherent in the technology.

                      All you need to replicate this is a sufficiently large data set, a bit of compute time, and an open source license.
                      @mjg59
                      1 Reply Last reply
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                      • phooky@hexa.clubP phooky@hexa.club

                        @mjg59 playing music is pleasing. is the instrument the least interesting part of it? is the score? are the brushstrokes the least interesting part of a painting? it depends what you're looking at, and what the artist enjoys. it's completely valid that you think that the code itself is boring, but understand that other people find different forms of value in the work they do, and none of these opinions are universal.

                        penguin42@mastodon.org.ukP This user is from outside of this forum
                        penguin42@mastodon.org.ukP This user is from outside of this forum
                        penguin42@mastodon.org.uk
                        wrote sidst redigeret af
                        #295

                        @phooky @mjg59 But that also includes the people who like using AIs for part of it; whichever part they're not particularly interested in.

                        1 Reply Last reply
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                        • mjg59@nondeterministic.computerM mjg59@nondeterministic.computer

                          When I write code I am turning a creative idea into a mechanical embodiment of that idea. I am not creating beauty. Every line of code I write is a copy of another line of code I've read somewhere before, lightly modified to meet my needs. My code is not intended to evoke emotion. It does not change people think about the world. The idea→code pipeline in my head is not obviously distinguishable from the prompt->code process in an LLM

                          wronglang@bayes.clubW This user is from outside of this forum
                          wronglang@bayes.clubW This user is from outside of this forum
                          wronglang@bayes.club
                          wrote sidst redigeret af
                          #296

                          @mjg59 bruh, masons spend their days gluing one brick on top of another and even they are aware that they can create beauty. Just because your projects have all the living energy of roadkill doesn't mean the rest of us are at that level.

                          1 Reply Last reply
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                          • mjg59@nondeterministic.computerM mjg59@nondeterministic.computer

                            Free software people: A major goal of free software is for individuals to be able to cause software to behave in the way they want it to
                            LLMs: (enable that)
                            Free software people: Oh no not like that

                            soc@chaos.socialS This user is from outside of this forum
                            soc@chaos.socialS This user is from outside of this forum
                            soc@chaos.social
                            wrote sidst redigeret af
                            #297

                            @mjg59 🤡

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                            • mjg59@nondeterministic.computerM mjg59@nondeterministic.computer

                              Free software people: A major goal of free software is for individuals to be able to cause software to behave in the way they want it to
                              LLMs: (enable that)
                              Free software people: Oh no not like that

                              gardiner_bryant@mastodon.onlineG This user is from outside of this forum
                              gardiner_bryant@mastodon.onlineG This user is from outside of this forum
                              gardiner_bryant@mastodon.online
                              wrote sidst redigeret af
                              #298

                              @mjg59 as a writer and a coder, I have to say that there *is* a creative aspect to both and the same regions of my brain light up when I'm writing either. Code just have exacting syntax that must be obeyed.

                              1 Reply Last reply
                              0
                              • mjg59@nondeterministic.computerM mjg59@nondeterministic.computer

                                When I write code I am turning a creative idea into a mechanical embodiment of that idea. I am not creating beauty. Every line of code I write is a copy of another line of code I've read somewhere before, lightly modified to meet my needs. My code is not intended to evoke emotion. It does not change people think about the world. The idea→code pipeline in my head is not obviously distinguishable from the prompt->code process in an LLM

                                gardiner_bryant@mastodon.onlineG This user is from outside of this forum
                                gardiner_bryant@mastodon.onlineG This user is from outside of this forum
                                gardiner_bryant@mastodon.online
                                wrote sidst redigeret af
                                #299

                                @mjg59 I don't read other people's code save for documentation and snippets on StackExchange. That's not to say my code is unique, but saying "every line of code I write is a copy of someone else's" is more or less true about virtually every sentence ever committed to paper. Doesn't make your creativity any less valid. Doesn't make the problem you're solving or the app your building any less unique.

                                mjg59@nondeterministic.computerM 1 Reply Last reply
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                                • mjg59@nondeterministic.computerM mjg59@nondeterministic.computer

                                  @Nfoonf The irony here is that now I have money I would rather pay people to solve these problems

                                  woltiv@mastodon.socialW This user is from outside of this forum
                                  woltiv@mastodon.socialW This user is from outside of this forum
                                  woltiv@mastodon.social
                                  wrote sidst redigeret af
                                  #300

                                  @mjg59 @Nfoonf Paying *people* to code for you: good. You provide income to a person who you can meet and respect and be colleagues with.

                                  Paying OpenAI to code for you: bad. Coding is another rent seeking capitalist nightmare and enriches no one in your local economy.

                                  1 Reply Last reply
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                                  • wouter@pleroma.debian.socialW wouter@pleroma.debian.social
                                    @Ced
                                    GCC at the time was thought of as something no volunteer could build.

                                    They did it anyway.

                                    There is nothing inherent about the technology behind LLMs that can't be built by a sufficiently determined group of volunteers.

                                    The fact that current LLMs require whole data centres to run has more to do with (a) the fact that companies take performance shortcuts because they have money to burn and it takes them to market faster,
                                    @mjg59
                                    C This user is from outside of this forum
                                    C This user is from outside of this forum
                                    ced@mastodon.sdf.org
                                    wrote sidst redigeret af
                                    #301

                                    @wouter @mjg59

                                    I am not sure we disagree, I do agree on the fact that a tools that allow anyone to modify programs for their own needs is exactly what free software is about.

                                    I disagree that what we have today is that though, feels more like a free drug for kids program right now.

                                    To build domestic of them efficiently we would need to understand how they work… should not stop anyone of course.

                                    wouter@pleroma.debian.socialW 1 Reply Last reply
                                    0
                                    • mjg59@nondeterministic.computerM mjg59@nondeterministic.computer

                                      Free software people: A major goal of free software is for individuals to be able to cause software to behave in the way they want it to
                                      LLMs: (enable that)
                                      Free software people: Oh no not like that

                                      stackdump@fosstodon.orgS This user is from outside of this forum
                                      stackdump@fosstodon.orgS This user is from outside of this forum
                                      stackdump@fosstodon.org
                                      wrote sidst redigeret af
                                      #302

                                      @mjg59 for many it’s a Moral question.

                                      There are two kinds of ‘free’ in OSS

                                      Free as in beer: no downside you get something you didn’t have
                                      Free as in piano: something so unwieldy you can have it if you can move it.

                                      I’m not against free anything - but sometimes there’s a hidden cost.
                                      We can be against hidden cost Morally *and* still enjoy free pianos - if you can move them.

                                      1 Reply Last reply
                                      0
                                      • C ced@mastodon.sdf.org

                                        @wouter @mjg59

                                        I am not sure we disagree, I do agree on the fact that a tools that allow anyone to modify programs for their own needs is exactly what free software is about.

                                        I disagree that what we have today is that though, feels more like a free drug for kids program right now.

                                        To build domestic of them efficiently we would need to understand how they work… should not stop anyone of course.

                                        wouter@pleroma.debian.socialW This user is from outside of this forum
                                        wouter@pleroma.debian.socialW This user is from outside of this forum
                                        wouter@pleroma.debian.social
                                        wrote sidst redigeret af
                                        #303
                                        @Ced
                                        I don't think that anyone is claiming that we have that today. Certainly I didn't read Matthew's post that started off this thread in that way.

                                        There's a subset of people in the free software community that go 'all LLM bad'. I don't necessarily agree with that.
                                        @mjg59
                                        wouter@pleroma.debian.socialW 1 Reply Last reply
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                                        • wouter@pleroma.debian.socialW wouter@pleroma.debian.social
                                          @Ced
                                          I don't think that anyone is claiming that we have that today. Certainly I didn't read Matthew's post that started off this thread in that way.

                                          There's a subset of people in the free software community that go 'all LLM bad'. I don't necessarily agree with that.
                                          @mjg59
                                          wouter@pleroma.debian.socialW This user is from outside of this forum
                                          wouter@pleroma.debian.socialW This user is from outside of this forum
                                          wouter@pleroma.debian.social
                                          wrote sidst redigeret af
                                          #304
                                          Yes, current LLM bad, because of the unethical behaviour of the companies pushing it. And yes, that's reason enough to dislike current LLMs.

                                          But the tech itself is not terrible, and if we can build it ethically, can be useful.
                                          @mjg59 @Ced
                                          1 Reply Last reply
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