• @latenightnoir
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      1219 days ago

      Yep, NOW it’s a problem, though! Because it’s someone else doing the same thing, someone who isn’t part of the human centipede starting at Trump’s colon.

    • @[email protected]
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      209 days ago

      Chinese company:

      Truly, you have a dizzling intellect.

      Microsoft:

      AND IM JUST GETTING STARTED! Where was I?

      Chinese company:

      Stealing data…

  • @MolecularCactus1324
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    1189 days ago

    You mean they ripped off the copyrighted material that OpenAI ripped off?

    • @[email protected]
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      29 days ago

      How could it be better when they just stole everything? The fact that its better basically proves that its not stolen.

  • @[email protected]
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    8 days ago

    Stealing from thieves isn’t a crime.

    Especially not when China turns around and Robin Hoods it back to the world.

    Just saying.

    • sunzu2
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      308 days ago

      China really did one on our oligarchs haha

      Beautiful

      These parasites expect me to side with them?

    • @[email protected]
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      128 days ago

      Making R1 open source really makes it such a big FU to all the grifters asking for billions for AI in the us. Especially funny because high-flyer is a hedge fund firm themselves. The ai race should only be determined by what you do with it, not protecting how much IP you hoovered up and are now trying to cry about it being copied by others.

  • @aeronmelon
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    619 days ago

    “You can’t steal that public data! We stole it first!”

    And considering that’s exactly what Microsoft did to Apple with point and click, what irony!

        • The_Decryptor
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          7 days ago

          Yep, Apple paid with shares (More specifically, the right to buy $1 million dollars worth at the initial share price) which, according to a share calculator I just tried, would be worth nearly $328 million these days, I wonder if Xerox kept them or offloaded them early.

          Considering Xerox was utterly uninterested in any of the tech they had, it’s worked out well.

      • @aeronmelon
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        49 days ago

        https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UFcb-XF1RPQ

        The relevant part of Pirates of Silicon Valley. After which you should watch the whole thing. It’s fan fiction, but it’s the best explanation of what happened between Apple and Microsoft leading into the 1990s.

    • @Oaksey
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      38 days ago

      They didn’t steal it from Smith & Wesson?

  • @Jhex
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    438 days ago

    What data? they one OpenAI illegally obtained first?!

  • @[email protected]
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    9 days ago

    I’m sure now that OpenAI accuses DeepSeek of stealing they will now prove that they have rights to things that are being stolen, right? XD

  • @demizerone
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    389 days ago

    Somebody better call the WAHMBULANCE!

  • @[email protected]
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    359 days ago

    Are they worried that deepsink too stuff written by others, mixed it up, and repackaged it as it’s own?

    Well, yeah, that’s all AI is. An expensive weighted pachinko machine, that uses human made content, and remixes it.

    • @chiliedogg
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      9 days ago

      The question isn’t whether they’ve used the same information. It’s whether they’ve faked the process to achieve that 20x efficiency.

      Look at it like a dictionary. Writing one from scratch is a huge task, no matter how many other books exist. How do you even go about finding all of the words?

      But if other people have already written dictionaries, you can just use their word lists and go from there.

      It’s more efficient, but only because it’s a completely different task.

      • @[email protected]
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        08 days ago

        No AI company has ever made any of their own content to train their models, they took what others created, remixed it, and presented it as something new.

        This AI model did the same thing.

        AI lost its job to AI.

        • @chiliedogg
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          28 days ago

          Yes, but that doesn’t mean it is more efficient, which is what the whole thing is about.

          Let’s pretend we’re not talking about AI, but tuna fishing. OpenTuna is sending hundreds of ships to the ocean to go fishing. It’s extremely expensive, but it gets results.

          If another fish distributor shows up out of nowhere selling tuna for 1/10 the price, it would be amazing. But if you found out that they could sell them cheap because they were stealing the fish from OpenTuna warehouses, you wouldn’t argue that the secret to catching fish going forward is theft and stop building boats.

            • @chiliedogg
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              08 days ago

              So what happens when OpenTuna runs out of fish to steal and there are no more boats?

              Information doesn’t stop being created. AI models need to be constantly trained and updated with new information. One of the biggest issues with GPT3 was the 2021 knowledge cutoff.

              Let’s pretend you’re building a legal analysis AI tool that scrapes the web for information on local, state, and federal law in the US. If your model was from January 2008 and was never updated, then gay marriage wouldn’t be legal in the US, the ACA wouldn’t exist, Super PACs would be illegal, the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau wouldn’t exist, zoning ordinances in pretty much every city would be out of date, and openly carrying a handgun in Texas would get you jailtime.

              It would essentially be a useless tool, and copying that old training data wouldn’t make a better product no matter how cheap it was to do.

              • @[email protected]
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                18 days ago

                Once tuna runs out, and we run out of boats?

                Maybe we then stop destroying the tuna population?

                Or, to bring this back to point: the environment will be better off once the AI bubble collapses.

                • @chiliedogg
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                  18 days ago

                  That’s a very important, but entirely separate conversation.

  • @motor_spirit
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    349 days ago

    Time to talk about data rights :)

  • @[email protected]
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    308 days ago

    What’s the game plan if they did?

    Trade restrictions?

    China already proved those did fuck all to stop them from developing their own model.

    Ducking knew this ai bubble would burst sooner or later, just glad we can finally get on with it now.

    • ɔiƚoxɘup
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      58 days ago

      I ducking knew it too, I’ve been a long for the ride though. The models still do have some niche applications where they’re actually useful.

      This whole thing with OpenAI and Microsoft whinging about fair play is truly laughable though. What clowns.

      As a side note, it took a few tries to write ducking, my keyboard kept correcting it to fucking. We’re definitely 2 different people. Lol.

    • @[email protected]
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      18 days ago
      1. Name the company involved a military asset
      2. Forbid US companies from hosting the models
      3. Pressure foreign companies to not work with them
  • rhabarba
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    269 days ago

    So that means that Microsoft will pay compensation to us, right?

  • @daddy32
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    258 days ago

    Lol its like fucking lavrov from fucking russia screaming “this is against international law” when Europe froze their assets.

    • sunzu2
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      178 days ago

      Bro… US reaction here is so pathetic…

      The behavior is indicative of a bigger issue. They really do think only they are allowed to cheat and steal to win lol