https://www.techdirt.com/2023/05/30/perhaps-gpt-is-not-ready-for-the-supreme-court/ Lawyer sanctioned for using ChatGPT to generate nonsense legal filings with non-existent citations.
I seriously doubt an "AI tool" could replace programmers. It might be able to create a toy, but it will fail very, very badly in the real world. Is the AI bubble finally getting to the point, again, where people are hyping it being able to do anything and everything?
This is not AI related, but there have been a number of failed "allow normies to code" type projects over the years and they have gone over about as well as you'd expect. The problem is more that "normies" cannot fundamentally grasp programming (even concepts like scoping), rather than lacking a "more powerful tool".
Also, ironically, the most powerful allow "normies" to "code" tool ever is Microsoft Excel.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=89ZkydX0FPw If you're wondering what happened to Article 13 (renamed to Article 17), it is still slowly being rolled out.
A few countries like Finland outright decided not to implement it at all and the Commission got really mad at them.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1efOs0BsE0g I wonder what has come of Julian Assange. Is he still sitting in Belmarsh Prison?
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kecnSHmznic If you're wondering how it's going in Australia, they're only banning the right to protest.
https://reason.com/2023/05/31/childproofing-the-internet/ They are all awful bills which trample on human rights. They're also clearly unconstitutional and it's very unclear whether they would even meet their goals.
It would, however, expand government power, and that is always a temptation for authorities. You should contact representatives to oppose these kinds of bills.
For instance, if it was the U.S. and Republicans, a court would very likely intervene with the age verification nonsense that Schmidt was pushing. Or with the anti-LGBT bills they've been pushing.
Or with the obscenity law they tried to abuse in Virginia in 2022, the entire bill was ruled unconstitutional (they tried to ban a LGBT book). These kinds of protections against government over-reach.
https://www.timesofisrael.com/germanys-centrist-parties-alarmed-as-poll-shows-growing-support-for-far-right/ This is why it is important to have a strong constitution which can actually hold the government to account.
"save the children from the evil porns"
Oh no, someone under 18 might see pornography. Whatever will we do. The sky will fall. This is the worst thing ever... This is so stupid.
What's wild about the whole Schmidt saga is how one obscure bureaucrat from one particular region in Germany decided he wanted to save the children from the evil porns (a red flag as ever), so he ran a campaign, filed lawsuits, and twisted the arms of other people to go in and start harassing adult creators.
One. Guy.
I have concerns about Twitter's handling of Germany, in particular, in regards to handing over user information in response to Tobias Schmidt's Nazi harassment campaign against sex workers, and even, a sex researcher.
Did Twitter push back against these governmental requests? Or did they bow like in Turkey to authoritarians?
During Twitter v Taamneh, Elon's incompetent lawyer essentially made the argument that platforms should be held liable, if say, an authoritarian government claims someone is a "terrorist".
It took everyone else writing to the Court, and presumably, sensible justices to bypass that.
Free speech absolutist.
"Sorry for being a free speech absolutist"
Early last year, Elon tried to push an idea that he was some sort of principled free speech figure.
We have seen significant evidence that he is not.
We have seen significant evidence that he has wrongly suspended anime themed accounts for no reason whatsoever, although considering the number of conspiratorial nutcases he surrounds himself with, perhaps he doesn't need a real reason.
Elon has censored keywords related to mainstream LGBT content, such as "bisexual". Why? No one knows.
If we consider that other companies, such as Patreon, are doing similar things, it might be pressure to suppress pornography from religious groups.
Why on earth would a "free speech absolutist" be taking directions from them?
Elon Musk has kowtowed to authoritarians. Turkey. India.
He berated the previous management for taking the "shocking" step of taking legal action against the Modi Regime's censorship.
He did this as a "get out of jail card" when he wanted to get out of acquiring the company by claiming that Twitter were jeopardizing their own ability to operate in India.
This was always a silly claim. In the context of looking for a perfunctory excuse to back out of a deal, it didn't seem so bad.
Elon has granted far more censorship requests from governments than the previous management ever did, even if we think that they could have or should have pushed back more on requests.
When journalists rubbed him the wrong way, Elon's staff looked for excuses to suspend their accounts.
Elon appears to loath people posting photos of him with Ghislaine Maxwell. He censors that too.
While I imagine Ghislaine, as a socialite fraternized with many powerful people, and he is extremely unlikely to be part of a "cabal", it is thin skinned.
Suppressing links to competing companies was problematic. A practice which might actually be illegal, and which offended his own VC friends.
Elon also stopped consulting, among other civil society groups, the Center for Democracy and Technology. For a so-called "free speech absolutist", it is interesting that he doesn't consult with any free speech groups.
Ella Irwin, Head of Trust & Safety, more or less signalled she would stop doing impact assessments to make sure that people aren't unfairly censored by moderation changes.
Yes, the "free speech absolutist" who made a point about how if in doubt he would lean towards speech, is far worse about that than the previous management.
Seemingly, the only speech he does protect is that of a few odious public figures.
Even that has a dodgy history, such as his "I know it when I see it" approach to moderation with Kanye West.
It's not unusual for a site to have a policy against Nazi symbolism. It is nonetheless unusual to make a point about being a free speech absolutist and to quickly strike someone down.
His moderation rationale boils down to "take down the bad content and keep up the good content". He doesn't seem to understand that everyone has a different idea of what this should be, and he lacks any sort of coherent principles in this regard.
Elon appears to be censoring dark humor. So much for the "anti-woke" warrior who is sick of people trampling on "fun".
There are many ways in which Elon is anything but the free speech warrior he portrays himself to be.
Posing as a free speech warrior is a fairly common grift for some nowadays.
It allows someone to feign outrage about people being "cancelled" without actually taking substantive action to provide people with a platform for free expression.
If anything, some of the biggest "free speech" grifters appear to be the biggest censors. How about that.
By the way, there is no such thing as porn "addiction".
In theory, someone might turn to porn for *other problems*, although those are the real problems, not that.
If a spouse has a "huge" problem with a husband watching *any* porn, then maybe she is the real problem, because that does not look like a healthy relationship.
In quite a number of cases, porn "addiction" appears to be a rebranding of conversion therapy (which is coming under growing scrutiny).
Conversion therapy is extremely harmful and ineffective. It causes trauma, suicidal ideation, and other negative mental states.
Software Engineer. Psy / Tech / Sex Science Enthusiast. Controversial?
Free Expression. Human rights / Civil Liberties. Anime. Liberal.