Show newer

theguardian.com/commentisfree/ They are right that would contribute to water scarcity / resource consumption. In fact, I think I covered this before, unfortunately, that post has been buried.

As for the recommendation, more transparency on this would be interesting. And it's not just a company which could be more transparent, governments could provide more information on this (whenever it goes through them). Fuzzier concepts are hard to comment on.

So far, it seems like OpenAI's architectures are probably the worst. It uses far larger data sets. It has worse privacy issues. It probably consumes more resources.

nature.com/articles/d41586-024
"The Japanese government is pushing ahead with a plan to make ’s publicly funded research output free to read. This month, the science ministry will assign funding to universities to build the infrastructure needed to make research papers free to read on a national scale. The move follows the ministry’s announcement in February that researchers who receive government funding will be required to make their papers freely available to read on the institutional repositories from January 2025."

oits-icit.org/oits-archieve/OC Supposedly, this Indian conference had a panel about AI harms. I don't see it, do you?

As an example of the sort of dead end I have to chase.

One thing which might crop up are numbers like "hundreds" or "thousands" of images which sound big until you realize the scale of the Internet with billions of people and that a video has 3600 frames per minute (with 60FPS).

Without further context, it's hard to argue that these numbers are meaningful but someone is still expected to feel that the sky is falling.

A single batch (and it is not as if spam is unusual) can contain a lot.

Show thread

Sometimes, there is a "report" which allegedly supports someone's point, but there won't be a link to it, so I will have to figure out what that is about and track it down to discover that it is again cherry picked or exaggerated.

Show thread

There is also the problem where something which I debunked like five months ago will be carried from person to person where it might suddenly seem like a new point, but when you dig into it, it turns out it isn't.

Show thread

If my AI takes aren't satisfying enough, they kind of should do though, it is because each month, there has been someone talking about how the "situation has changed", and then, you read a bunch of documents and it turns out it practically hasn't. My time is limited.

If you are really sure it has, in some way in which it really hasn't before, I might take a look at it but I'm done spending days reading things for now to figure out that someone is exaggerating.

Commit a crime involving malware and get arrested. Mundane.

Commit a crime involving malware where writing the code might have been assisted by "AI" (it's not known to be reliable) and get arrested. Big AI crackdown! We are showing AI! The worst confirmed!

"Twitter and Reddit are kept on app stores purely because of revenue"

This is paraphrased. Julie's take here is really quite something. Could it be that if you arbitrarily remove very popular apps, it could create huge problems? If anything, it would be far more scandalous, if they were arbitrarily removing apps, particularly ones from competing companies.

theguardian.com/world/article/
" Republicans are open to applying the death penalty to abortion providers, a new proposal from the state party indicates.

Over the weekend, during the Texas GOP convention, Republican delegates voted on a party platform for 2024 that proclaims “abortion is not healthcare, it is homicide” and suggests striking a state law that protects abortion providers from being charged with homicide. In Texas, capital murder is punishable by the death penalty. Killing a child under the age of 15 can qualify as capital murder, the most severe form of homicide."

theguardian.com/australia-news
"The government is using drones to track people released from detention"

"“There is so much being done for this cohort: spot checks, random house checks, as well as the use of drones that I just touched on.”"

"In Senate estimates on Wednesday, Australian Border Force officials revealed that 76 of the 153 people released are subject to electronic monitoring and 68 are subject to curfews, which are generally from 10pm to 6am."
Even if it is a murderer, isn't this really excessive?

bbc.com/news/technology-690559
"Sara needed some chocolate - she had had one of those days - so wandered into a Home Bargains store.

"Within less than a minute, I'm approached by a store worker who comes up to me and says, 'You're a thief, you need to leave the store'."

Sara - who wants to remain anonymous - was wrongly accused after being flagged by a facial-recognition system called .

She says after her bag was searched she was led out of the shop, and told she was banned from all stores using the technology."

edri.org/our-work/la-quadratur
"Through an emergency proceeding (reféré-liberté) filed last week, La Quadrature du Net asked the Conseil d’État (Council of State) to suspend French Prime Minister Gabriel Attal’s decision to block the platform in ."

edri.org/our-work/be-scanned-o
"In the latest in a string of alarming developments, the Belgian government has proposed a new supposed ‘solution’ to the (Child Sexual Abuse Regulation) deadlock in the Council. Providers of private communications services must ask people to consent to faulty AI-based scanning of their private chats, they suggest – or be banned from sharing images, videos and URLs!"

eff.org/deeplinks/2024/05/alas
"In March, the Supreme Court held in State v. McKelvey that the Alaska Constitution required law enforcement to obtain a warrant before photographing a private backyard from an aircraft. In this case, the police took photographs of Mr. McKelvey’s property, including the constitutionally protected curtilage area, from a small aircraft using a zoom lens."

I think that when it comes to taboos, Dr. Lehmiller recognizes that using "fetishism" as a category is less stigmatizing and implies less than going for that *other thing* per convention.

If you've been following my content for a while, you will probably have already seen these but I prefer to focus on other things.

Show thread

I thought of adding more to the additional section but I'll just leave it at adding a few freaky fantasies are common links.

Olives  
We noticed #AI related matters can be a spot to peddle anti-porn pseudo-science. For the past half year or so, I've kept an eye on some discourse. ...
Show older
Qoto Mastodon

QOTO: Question Others to Teach Ourselves
An inclusive, Academic Freedom, instance
All cultures welcome.
Hate speech and harassment strictly forbidden.