• Pennomi
      link
      English
      111 month ago

      I just think it’s silly that people think it actually works.

      Besides, if AI really is powerful enough to make a splash in the world, wouldn’t you WANT it to contain your data? That would make it more favorable to your viewpoints.

      • Cosmic Cleric
        link
        English
        -6
        edit-2
        1 month ago

        I just think it’s silly that people think it actually works.

        Are you a lawyer? Are you familiar with the Creative Commons license?

        If not, please feel free to get back to us after you get your degree, and let us all know what the final word is on this.

        Besides, if AI really is powerful enough to make a splash in the world, wouldn’t you WANT it to contain your data?

        Oh I would love that, if they paid me to use my content, under terms that I would agree for it to be used (betterment of Humankind, etc.).

        Anti Commercial-AI license (CC BY-NC-SA 4.0)

        • Pennomi
          link
          English
          101 month ago

          I’m quite familiar. It legally works, if you can prove that your data actually made it into the training set, you might be able to successfully sue them. That’s extremely unlikely though. If you can’t litigate a law, then it essentially doesn’t exist.

          Besides, a researcher scraping websites isn’t going to take the time to filter out random pieces of data based on a link contained in the body. If you can show me a research paper or blog post or something where a process is described to sanitize the input data based on license, that would be pretty damn interesting. Maybe it’ll exist in the future?

          Besides, the best way to opt-out of AI training is to enable site-wide flags, which mark the content therein as off limits. That would have the benefit of not only protecting you, but everyone else on the site. Lobbying your lemmy instance to enable that will get a lot more mileage than anything else you could do, because it’s an industry sanctioned way to accomplish what you want.

          • Cosmic Cleric
            link
            English
            -6
            edit-2
            1 month ago

            I’m quite familiar. It legally works, if you can prove that your data actually made it into the training set, you might be able to successfully sue them. That’s extremely unlikely though. If you can’t litigate a law, then it essentially doesn’t exist.

            And what makes you think that can’t be done? You make it sound like because (you believe) it’s so hard to do you should have just not even bother trying, that seems really defeatist.

            And like I said multiple times now, it’s a simple quick copy and paste, a ‘low-hanging fruit’ way of licensing/protecting a comment. If it works, great it works.

            Besides, the best way to opt-out of AI training is to enable site-wide flags, which mark the content therein as off limits.

            I have no control over the Lemmy servers, I only have control over my own comments that I post.

            Also, the two options are not mutually exclusive.

            because it’s an industry sanctioned way to accomplish what you want.

            Again, both you and I know the history of the robots.txt file and how often and how well it’s honored, especially these days with the new frontier of AI modeling.

            It would be best to do both, just to make sure you have coverage, so that if the robots.txt is not honored, at least the comment itself is still licensed.

            Anti Commercial-AI license (CC BY-NC-SA 4.0)

    • @[email protected]
      link
      fedilink
      101 month ago

      It might seem silly to most but all it takes for something to become real is for the public to demand it. And if those in power won’t help, oust them.

      At least this person demands something novel and positive for the user. What is fiction today can become reality tomorrow.

      Seems harmless at worst and positive at best.

        • Cosmic Cleric
          link
          English
          -3
          edit-2
          1 month ago

          I mean the appropriate way to do that

          Is there some Lemmy rule somewhere that I don’t know about that says I can’t attach a Creative Commons license to my comments?

          It’s pretty much just a flag in the robots.txt

          Because everyone knows that’s always honored and obeyed, right?

          Also, it’s a proprietary flag created by Google and only used by Google (per the article you linked).

          So if you want to actually make a difference, lobby your Lemmy instance to add this flag.

          Or do both.

          Because users are the final owners of their own content, their own comments. Not Lemmy, not anyone else. They have the first responsibility of protecting their rights.

          Anti Commercial-AI license (CC BY-NC-SA 4.0)

          • Pennomi
            link
            English
            11 month ago

            Oof yeah that was not the correct word at all. It would have been better to say effective.

            You’re always free to do what you want of course!

            • Cosmic Cleric
              link
              English
              -4
              edit-2
              1 month ago

              You’re always free to do what you want of course!

              You sure about that? 😇

              The vibe I’m getting from you is kind of the opposite, as you’re the third person to give me a major hassle about them just within the 24-hour period.

              I honestly wasn’t expecting the level of Spanish Inquisition that I’ve gotten over using them, it’s really fascinating actually. /queueMontyPython

              Anyway, I would love to stop talking about this and derailing what the thread was actually supposed to be about.

              Anti Commercial-AI license (CC BY-NC-SA 4.0)