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ChemicalRascal, to mildlyinfuriating in A new trend in tipping emerges
ChemicalRascal avatar

It really doesn't have to be a "fact of life", and it isn't in many places, such as Australia and England -- nations with very similar degrees of economic prosperity, and very similar cultures, to the USA.

ChemicalRascal, to patientgamers in Started Playing 'The Talos Principle'
ChemicalRascal avatar

The Looker is fantastic. I was particularly disappointed to learn that Blow took it as an insult, though.

ChemicalRascal, to asklemmy in What would happen if we put a giant glass tinted dome over each city?
ChemicalRascal avatar

Solar wind is not going to just yeet stuff around like that. It'll have some sort of impact, but it's not like, you know, actual wind.

ChemicalRascal, to asklemmy in What would happen if we put a giant glass tinted dome over each city?
ChemicalRascal avatar

Whisked off into space by what, exactly?

ChemicalRascal, to asklemmy in What would happen if we put a giant glass tinted dome over each city?
ChemicalRascal avatar

A large swarm of satellites, forming an adjustable solar shade, sitting around L1 for Earth-Sun is likely the best approach we would have. The swarm wouldn't be in a geosynchronous orbit, though, but instead a heliosynchronous one.

ChemicalRascal, to politics in Georgia Supreme Court denies Trump bid to quash Fulton County investigation
ChemicalRascal avatar

Good stuff, Georgia. Especially with it being unanimous. Though given Trump's demonstrated typical approach, I can't imagine the rebuke from the court will prevent him from making similar attempts in the future.

ChemicalRascal, to lemmyworld in Android Community Closure Update
ChemicalRascal avatar

Yes, essentially.

ChemicalRascal, to asklemmy in What does an ideal world look like to you?
ChemicalRascal avatar

Realistically? Something a lot like what we currently have, but with everyone having access to prompt healthcare, living in comfort. A focus on community and cooperation being more dominant in the culture, rather than competition and comparison.

ChemicalRascal, to asklemmy in should we be worried about powers-moderators/users?
ChemicalRascal avatar

Exactly this. On Reddit, you would end up with stuff like r/TrueStarWars and such as a result of bad mods moderating badly — but those communities would have a harder time taking off due to the name being less searchable, and individuals needing to be "in the know" about why one sub has "true" out the front.

With everyone being able to take the same community name, just across different instances, there's a potential for a better, more competitive process to take place instead. It won't be perfect — @starwars is going to be in a much more immediately advantaged position than, say, @starwars — but in theory the playing field is closer to being level.

ChemicalRascal, to memes in seen on mastodon
ChemicalRascal avatar

I just learned to accept that I am weird and filthy.

ChemicalRascal, to main in (URGENT) Lemmy has an XSS vulnerability in the sidebar
ChemicalRascal avatar

Oh, good! That's excellent then.

ChemicalRascal, to main in (URGENT) Lemmy has an XSS vulnerability in the sidebar
ChemicalRascal avatar

That would essentially be patching the vulnerability. A temporary fix would be just preventing the sidebar from being editable.

(Ideally the vulnerability would be patched, but these things take time.)

ChemicalRascal, to mildlyinfuriating in My Instacart shopper is making some wild changes.
ChemicalRascal avatar

Wait, what? Half an hour to pull the groceries off shelves and get them through checkout. Let's be real, that isn't going to take an hour, even for a week's worth of groceries for a nuclear family.

Two hours round-trip for the travel. Not four hours, two and a half real-time.

The team-size needed for this, assuming a delivery vehicle, is one. More people would be needed if you're on public transport because you don't control the environment the groceries are in, but we're not assuming that. So, 2.5 hours, 1 person, is 2.5 hours of wages. At $20 an hour, $70. Round up to $80 or $85 to account for benefits and sundries -- that's 21% of wages, which should be reasonable for non-wage expenses.

That's still not great, but let's not inflate the numbers.

ChemicalRascal, to tech in Anger from voice actors as NSFW mods use AI deepfakes to replicate their voices: 'This is NOT okay'
ChemicalRascal avatar

I suggest reading my entire comment.

I did, buddy. You're just wrong. You can copyright data. A work can be "just data". Again, we're not talking about a set of measurements of the natural world.

It's only a work if your brain is a work. (...) The weights that make up a neural network represent encodings into neurons, and as such should be treated the same way as neural encodings in a brain.

Okay, I see how you have the hot take that a generative model is brain-like to you, but that's a hot take -- it's not a legally accepted fact that a trained model is not a work.

You understand that, right? You do get that this hasn't been debated in court, and what you think is correct is not necessarily how the legal system will rule on the matter, yeah?

Because the argument that a trained generative model is a work is also pretty coherent. It's a thing that you can distribute, even monetise. It isn't a person, it isn't an intelligence, it's essentially part of a program, and it's the output of labour performed by someone.

The fact that something models neurons does not mean it can't be a work. That's not... coherent. You've jumped from A to Z and your argument to get there is "human brain has neurons". Like, okay? Does that somehow mean anything that is vaguely neuron-like is not a work? So if I make a mechanical neuron, I can't copyright it? I can't patent it?

No, that's absurd.

ChemicalRascal, to tech in Anger from voice actors as NSFW mods use AI deepfakes to replicate their voices: 'This is NOT okay'
ChemicalRascal avatar

Also, neural network weights are just a bunch of numbers, and I'm pretty sure data can't be copyrighted.

Just being "a bunch of numbers" doesn't stop it from being a work, it doesn't stop it from being a derivative work, and you absolutely can copyright data -- all digitally encoded works are "just data".

A trained AI is not a measurement of the natural world. It is a thing that has been created from the processing of other things -- in the common sense of it the word, it is derivative of those works. What remains, IMO, is the question of if it would be a work, or something else, and if that something else would be distinct enough from being a work to matter.

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