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lunarul @kbin.social
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Comments 17
Valve Removes Games Using AI-Generated Art From Steam Due to Potential Copyright Issues
  • A properly trained AI should not be able to do that. The data AI stores is not images or fragments of images. It's a set of weights for various attributes for each term. Like the concept of "cat" would be stored as the set of most common values for various attributes it analyzed and found to match on all training images labeled as "cat". With thousands of cat images as input, having proper variations between them, the result will always be unique.

    It's the same as a child learning to draw. If they see a drawing of a cat, they might try to copy that as best they can. But if they see many different representations of a cat then they will also learn to express themselves creatively and make up their own variation. And nobody is going to sue the kid for having looked at copyrighted pictures of cats.

  • Op-ed: Why the great #TwitterMigration didn’t quite pan out
  • Reddit migration will succeed for some communities and fail for others. Generic subs can live on with new mods and new subscribers. They're not much different from FB or Twitter. Just mindless content to feed that infinite scroll.

    Specialized subs where the community as a whole (or a majority at least) decides to move to a new home will move (or have moved already), because for those the community is what matters, not the venue.

  • The Lenna image.
  • It's not like they planned to make it the standard test image. Just a bunch of guys working on something looking for a quick test image and grabbing the first thing they found.

    Such a small section of the original image and at such low resolution would be pretty petty to shut down for copyright infringement. Especially since it was not used for profit, but for scientific research.

  • The Lenna image.
  • This was the standard image I used for all image processing in college. It's like the teapot model in 3D modeling. Or "hello world" and "foo" and "bar" in programming. Or "lorem ipsum" in digital layout.