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gnomicutterance deborah @awful.systems

You’re thinking of my brother, Zathras.

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Comments 120
Why do people who hate IP laws/copyright think we should be allowing AI companies to copy the whole internet when pirates still get arrested for piracy?
  • It is not, in fact, bad that copyright applies to a wider group than publishers, unless you are using "publisher" extremely broadly to apply to "creators".

    If "someone gets attacked for posting an image on social media", that rarely means "lawyers came after me because I posted a screenshot of a page from Sandman". It often means that the poster took someone else's art, snipped off the artist's signature, and posted without attribution, and the artist is rightfully angry. Copyright is what enables that artist to continue to eat and make more art. The same goes for music, or software, or movies.

    Sure, the system is horribly abused by uneven power structures, as every system in the world is. For music especially, we all know that the takedowns are usually issued by people who have nothing to do with the creation of the protected work, because of the way licensing and rights grants work in that industry. Automated takedown systems (which have to exist because of the scale of online content) also have no reasonable appeal mechanism, and the people making the decisions don't (and can't) make reasonable assessments about fair use and transformative works.

    I'm not saying that everyone who participates in piracy is a bad, wicked thief--I absolutely participate in it myself. But copyright is not the villain here; that's just trying to make us feel justified about our actions. Someone made a creative work I enjoyed, and I don't have a moral right to the product of their effort for free.

  • Stubsack: weekly thread for sneers not worth an entire post, week ending Sunday 7 July 2024
  • If you concede that there exist humans that are bullshit in the same way that ChatGPT is

    If you concede that cats are made of marmalade and always win Texas Hold 'Em games, then I don't think the argument against squaring the circle holds up.

  • Stubsack: weekly thread for sneers not worth an entire post, week ending Sunday 7 July 2024
  • hahaha no failfandomanon is extremely at Dreamwidth, but I think the wankiest people mostly moved to other places in recent years.

  • Stubsack: weekly thread for sneers not worth an entire post, week ending Sunday 7 July 2024
  • as a former member of multiple livejournal fanfic circlejerks, I am so sad that LW didn't join the rest of LJ in (1) getting off or (2) being mean on fandom_wank, and instead decided to create the torment nexus.

  • Stubsack: weekly thread for sneers not worth an entire post, week ending Sunday 7 July 2024
  • If you always bet on "everything confusing that weirdos say is a euphemism or proxy for Jews or Black people", you will beat the house. Canadians, lizards, trans people, common punctuation marks, apparently also the seelie court I guess.

  • Real people's real problems? Nah, it's AI Welfare Debate Week here at the EA Forums
  • oh lord I cannot imagine how they would torment nexus the tao te ching.

    ...wait yes I can. they'd decide that LLMs are the tao. "What's perfectly whole seems flawed, but you can use it forever." "To know without knowing is best." "If those in power could hold to the Way, the ten thousand things would look after themselves."

  • We regret to inform you that Ray Kurzweil is back on his bullshit
  • yeah, I knew about kurzweil reading machines for years before I connected them with ray kurzweil, and I don't know how much of his tech ended up in speech rec during the scansoft / dragon systems / nuance / lernout and hauspie katamari years, but that tech has enabled me to be an independent working adult for more than 20 years. So I owe him a debt of gratitude, but also, he needs to not be on his bullshit.

  • A Rant about Front-end Development
  • Remember when our industry cared about loading times?

  • A Rant about Front-end Development
  • This is so cathartic to read.

    I have worked with multiple static sites delivered with React, because somebody built an enterprise design system which is so tightly tied into React that it can't be applied any other way.

  • Why I'm leaving EA
  • From the comments:

    Insect welfare (unlike woke identitarian proliferation) is not a priori wrong.

    a community whose commendable openness to unbiased discussion of any idea, uh huh.

  • OAI employees channel the spirit of Marvin Minsky
  • if we're lucky, silicon valley will be eaten by a grue.

  • Stubsack: weekly thread for sneers not worth an entire post, week ending Sunday 30 June 2024
  • No, all you lawyers explaining to me how the practice of law works in the U.S., you would totally benefit from GPT. Complete with bonus:

    • Everyone explaining to me that lawyers actually read all the documents in discovery is really trying to explain to me, a computer scientist with 20 years of experience[1], how GPT works!
    • [1] Does OP have actual tech expertise? The answer may (not) surprise you!
    • You lawyers admit that sometimes you use google translate and database search engines, and those use machine learning components, and all ML is basically LLMs, so I'm right, Q.E.D.!
    • Lawyers couldn't possibly read everything in discovery, right?
    • Lawyers couldn't possibly pay for professional translation for everything, right?
    • Even when it's mandated by the court?
    • Really?
    • and many, many more
  • Stubsack: weekly thread for sneers not worth an entire post, week ending Sunday 30 June 2024
  • I use it, but at least on my browser the next button is disabled so I can only see the most recent page of updates. I treat that as a the jank is a feature moment, though; if there's more than one page of new comments, I'm forced to stop reading.

    a greyed out Next button, and a snippet of developer tools showing it's disabled

  • Stubsack: weekly thread for sneers not worth an entire post, week ending Sunday 30 June 2024
  • Pour one out for opera presto, which I will always mourn.

  • Stubsack: weekly thread for sneers not worth an entire post, week ending Sunday 30 June 2024
  • One last hurrah for the EPA and the clean air act before the scotus shanks the administrative state in a day or two.

  • Neither the devil you know nor the devil you don’t
  • Marx (who to be fair was operating in a very different global economy) explicitly excluded servants and other service labor from the proletariat, because he had an extremely industrial (cough gendered) definition of “productive labour.” That being said, he was friends, intellectual collaborators, and possibly lovers with the housekeeper.

    Disclaimer: I am no marx historian; my knowledge of marxist theory tends toward literary analysis. I may be simplifying to the point of wrong.

  • Neither the devil you know nor the devil you don’t
  • To be clear, I was critiquing his smug intolerance to be people who don’t meet his standards of so-called leftist perfection, when he, himself, is as complex as anyone else. I was not critiquing his being married or his living under capitalism.

  • TracingWoodgrains launches a defense of Manifest's controversial reputation, all without betraying a basic understanding of what the word "controversial" means.
  • When I was listening to the most recent episode of the Maintenance Phase podcast which was all in on mocking J. Michael Bailey with a special dig at autogynephilia theories, I went to go see if David had any history policing weirdos on Bailey's wikipedia page, as an excuse to bring the episode in for a stubsack link. And he didn't, which means, once again, booring.