• FaceDeer
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    -2310 months ago

    It’s the insistence that everything that people do must be compensated with money. People have spent years posting on Reddit for fun, without any thought to being paid for it, and now all of a sudden someone else is making some money so they’re demanding that they should get their slice. And doing what they can to wreck their earlier efforts when they don’t.

    How does Reddit making some money licensing this stuff harm those of us who contributed to it? Is there any problem aside from “I wanna get paid!”?

    • @[email protected]
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      1810 months ago

      Why do you think it’s about wanting a slice? They posted on Reddit with no expectation of profit. But they don’t want others to profit off it either. It’s not that complicated.

      • FaceDeer
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        -1910 months ago

        But they don’t want others to profit off it either.

        And that’s why I call them selfish. It doesn’t harm them in the slightest if someone else profits off of it.

        • @[email protected]
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          910 months ago

          They wouldn’t have posted if they knew this was going to happen. They posted because it was fun, not for this.

          They may be morally opposed to AI (as there are many valid reasons to be opposed to it), or they may just have wanted to have been able to make an informed decision before posting, but by retroactively training the AI on their posts they’ve robbed them of the agency to make that decision.

          That’s why they’re upset.

          • FaceDeer
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            -210 months ago

            They posted content on a website whose user agreement says “we can do whatever we like with the content you post here” and then go surprised-pikachu when the website goes ahead and does whatever they like with the content they posted. Frankly, I’m not tremendously sympathetic. This should have been easy to predict.

            • @[email protected]
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              310 months ago

              Oh yeah I’m sure you predicted LLMs, and that they would need ridiculous amounts of training data wayyyy back in 2005 when Reddit started lol. Super easy to predict. Good job bud.

        • @frostysauce
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          110 months ago

          And that’s why I’m calling you either a moron or a tool. Probably both.