I blame smartphones
- 8 Posts
- 721 Comments
chicken@lemmy.dbzer0.comto
No Stupid Questions@lemmy.world•Is it completely impossible to do age verification without compromising privacy?
6·3 days agoIf there’s one person who knows their applied zk proofs, it’s that guy.
chicken@lemmy.dbzer0.comto
No Stupid Questions@lemmy.world•Is it completely impossible to do age verification without compromising privacy?
22·3 days agoThere are some pretty strong arguments that even zk proof is a flawed way of preserving privacy though, in a variety of ways. It prevents pseudonymity by enabling one-user-one-account, and it leaves users vulnerable to being coerced to reveal their full online activities by handing over cryptographic keys.
chicken@lemmy.dbzer0.comto
Games@lemmy.world•Indie game developers have a new sales pitch: being ‘AI free’English
21·4 days agoThat’s literally what the comment above it was doing too though. It’s a very common anti-AI argument to appeal to social proof.
chicken@lemmy.dbzer0.comto
Open Source@lemmy.ml•Switzerland government release full FOSS LLM under Apache 2.0, argue for AI as Public Utility
2·5 days agoWe can’t afford to make any of this. We don’t have the money for the compute required or to pay for the lawyers to make the law work for us
I don’t think this is entirely true; yeah, large foundational models have training costs that are beyond the reach of individuals, but plenty can be done that is not, or can be done by a relatively small organization. I can’t find a direct price estimate for Apertus, and it looks like they used their own hardware, but it’s mentioned they used ten million gpu hours, and GH200 gpus; I found a source online claiming a rental cost of $1.50 per hour for that hardware, so I think the cost of training this could be loosely estimated to be something around 20 million dollars.
That is a lot of money if you are one person, but it’s an order of magnitude smaller than the settlements of billions of dollars being paid so far by the biggest AI companies for their hasty unauthorized use of copyrighted materials. It’s easy to see how copyright and legal costs could potentially be the bottleneck here preventing smaller actors from participating.
It should benefit the people, so it needs to change. It needs to be “expanded” (I wouldn’t call it that, rather “modified” but I’ll use your word) in that it currently only protects the wealthy and binds the poor. It should be the opposite.
How would that even work though? Yes, copyright currently favors the wealthy, but that’s because the whole concept of applying property rights to ideas inherently favors the wealthy. I can’t imagine how it could be the opposite even in theory, but in practice, it seems clear that any legislation codifying limitations on use and compensation for AI training will be drafted by lobbyists of large corporate rightsholders, at the obvious expense of everyone with an interest in free public ownership and use of AI technology.
chicken@lemmy.dbzer0.comto
Open Source@lemmy.ml•Switzerland government release full FOSS LLM under Apache 2.0, argue for AI as Public Utility
6·5 days agoBut we can’t afford to pay. I don’t think open models like the one in the OP article would be developed and released for free to the public if there was a complex process of paying billions of dollars to rightsholders in order to do so. That sort of model would favor a monopoly of centralized services run only by the biggest companies.
chicken@lemmy.dbzer0.comto
Comic Strips@lemmy.world•"L'appel du vide" - The Call of the Void
9·6 days agoI am thankful for the safety feature where locking the lid also depresses a button that allows the food processor to operate, but I also keep it unplugged when the lid is off for an extra layer of redundancy.
chicken@lemmy.dbzer0.comto
Technology@beehaw.org•The ‘Great Meme Reset’ Is Coming: From Jack Dorsey to Gen Alpha, everyone seemingly wants to go back to the internet of a decade ago. But is it possible to reverse AI slop and brain rot?
7·8 days agoTikTok
I think you’re always going to have problems with a lack of authenticity on platforms where opaque algorithms do all the work of deciding what gets popular and what gets shown to who.
but the kinds of people who grape others generally don’t feel shame
I think this is probably not true.
the primary tool society uses to respond to grape, assault, prison, ostracizing or murder is, so like, so what is there less shame?
Those tools aren’t equally available to everyone, they are expressions of power, which some people have access to more than others.
chicken@lemmy.dbzer0.comto
Ask Lemmy@lemmy.world•Have you ever met a truly evil person? What happened?
7·9 days agoFrom what I’ve heard “psychopath” is in fact a disorder that makes a person worse at managing their own life, in addition to making things worse for the people around them.
chicken@lemmy.dbzer0.comto
Games@lemmy.world•Guild Wars Reforged Announcement TrailerEnglish
2·10 days agoand there’s a well-defined mission in each zone
It’s been a long time but I remember there being missions with scripted events and objectives and stuff, but then also areas where the main thing to do was simply travel through it to get to other places. My favorite moment from the game was when I worked out that you could skip a portion of the normal progression by getting to a higher level area early to buy more powerful equipment, but actually getting there was a real challenge due to being underleveled and the difficulty of getting past enemies without killing them. I got a group to make the attempt (which took some explaining and persuasion because it wasn’t the normal next thing to do) and we spent hours on it and got to the last leg of the journey, but ultimately had to give up because our death penalties were stacked too high to get through that last bit. I was able to make it on a later attempt with a different group using character loadouts more specialized for the task.
Something I think GW1 did really well was doing various things like this to build up a sense of location and meaningful travel, which does a lot of work to compensate for the gameplay itself happening in isolated instances and making the world of the game feel expansive and epic.
chicken@lemmy.dbzer0.comto
Technology@lemmy.ml•Did Cloudflare just bring down half of the Internet?
3·11 days agoFor me what triggered getting a lot of malicious login attempts in the logs was pointing a dns record directly at my ip
chicken@lemmy.dbzer0.comto
Games@lemmy.world•Roblox to block children from talking to adult strangers after string of lawsuitsEnglish
6·11 days agoEmote only chat
I don’t watch his other content but in that one video he was absolutely doing exactly what a typical user would do in his situation. He was trying to follow a tutorial, he ran into the sort of warning message Windows users are conditioned to breeze past, and followed the onscreen instructions without trying to understand the confusing stuff. They changed how it worked after that incident, as they should if mass adoption is at all desirable.
chicken@lemmy.dbzer0.comto
Asklemmy@lemmy.ml•Guys and Girls of the fediverse who have made the decision to end a toxic relationship, did you choose to go to the gym? If so what has been the out come for you since then?
9·14 days agoWasn’t my choice to end it, but working out did help, the physical discomfort dulls the emotional pain. Although I did it at home rather than going to a gym. Years later I’m still more in shape than I was before that episode.
chicken@lemmy.dbzer0.comto
Bate-Papo@lemmy.eco.br•Make Your Own Beans Instead of Using Canned!
1·14 days agoI’ve been stocking up, having trouble finding dried garbanzo for some reason, the restaurant supply store I’ve gotten them at before does not seem to have them anymore.
chicken@lemmy.dbzer0.comto
Selfhosted@lemmy.world•Platform for Crowd Sourced Software Bounties?English
2·14 days agoWhat about a way to donate (held in reserve for that purpose?) money after the fact for specific commits, and then have a way to indicate which things you’d be most likely to donate to going forward if they are completed? This would mean less reliable payments since there wouldn’t be a guarantee any given contribution would result in a payout, but there wouldn’t be any disincentive to work on things and there would be a general idea of what donators want. Plus doing it that way would eliminate the need for a manual escrow process.
chicken@lemmy.dbzer0.comto
Piracy: ꜱᴀɪʟ ᴛʜᴇ ʜɪɢʜ ꜱᴇᴀꜱ@lemmy.dbzer0.com•'The Owl House’ creator Dana Terrace situation with Disney+ positive views on AI generated contentEnglish
4·15 days agoMaybe a little, but I think it fits pretty well, if you look at this from a “fuck copyright” angle. It’s easy to see the problems with what Disney is doing here and in general.






I think maybe they wouldn’t if they are trying to scale their operations to scanning through millions of sites and your site is just one of them