You might remember that I dug back to something like 2009, and even back then, I could catch sight of him farting in the direction of the First Amendment.
While these platforms might be slightly more convenient, at first, they often get obsoleted by newer platforms, or they get weird, or have odd ideas of what content they don't like, and then there is the inevitable process of dragging an audience to another site, and changing a bunch of things.
A proper #blog would give someone so much more control and it would pay off in the long run when something inevitably crops up.
Another British #ECHR case. Have they considered the possibility that such incidences occur due to the existence of a black market here...? That if cannabis was legal, this wouldn't happen?
https://qoto.org/@olives/111191543236620885 I haven't particularly specifically written much about "AI chatbots", but I go over it briefly here in my dive into bad faith conflations between fiction and reality.
https://qoto.org/@olives/111516011246609826 I've also been over here why puritanical anti porn rhetoric does not have a basis in science.
It's quite easy to fall into the "bothsidesism" trap too, where some random guy who doesn't really understand how things work might offer up his "hot take" (perhaps, someone looking at superficial associations and offering up garbage, or otherwise not factoring in anything other than a narrow slice of what they're looking at) and someone might try to "juxtapose" that against a more informed take.
https://qoto.org/@olives/111448111216663879 Also above the horrid "grrr, there are subhumans generating porn of fictional minors" take, there is also the "let's just focus on whether this increases or decreases crime" take which is, maybe better, although it still misses some key points (and is also prone to bothsidesism where some idiot, perhaps an ethicist or some other ignorant person, puts forth their own hot takes, and don't have qualms about doing it as they're not treating people as people). So, this unpicks that, although I haven't spent a great deal of time on that either, really.
I could comment further but it's not really a line of discourse which I really want to get into a dive about right now.
I suspect that OpenAI is most likely to run into the things which particularly rub people the wrong way, as far as copyright is concerned, more so than the "open source" options. I think it comes down to OpenAI trying to build more of a brand off "professionally finished style images".
I mean, yeah, we're also probably tired of how the original concept of copyright has also gotten ridiculously stretched, thereby depriving the public from being able to use a work, practically ever.
"Newly released body camera footage shows Aurora, Colorado, police forcing 44-year-old Teddy Pittman to the ground at gunpoint after mistaking him for a fugitive. After searching the terrified Pitman and his car, the cops eventually let him go—but not without giving him a ticket for driving with a suspended license and making a bad turn."
"After coming up empty-handed, the task force let Pittman go—but not without slapping him with a traffic ticket for driving with a suspended license and making a faulty left turn. A judge eventually dismissed the ticket."
The Joint Research Centre of the European Commission produced a disturbingly totalitarian report in 2022 which flew under the radar.
"The objective of the BC4T project is to investigate possible applications of blockchain (BC) technology on road transport, focusing on topics of interest to the European Commission’s policy agenda."
"The study also showed that sharing vehicle information such as fuel consumption or emissions to a fully BC-based monitoring system would be technically feasible."
"Adopting a European Digital Identity could open up a range of diverse applications within the connected mobility ecosystem linking users and regulators while protecting personal data and privacy. The benefits of the adoption and testing of BC could create a significant and transparent interlinking of public and private data and enable interoperability across different transport systems."
Honestly, people criticizing training AIs on copyrighted material is better than someone holding the same opinion, but instead trying to swat companies for things which don't really matter, like what if it generates an image of Mickey with a knife.
There is nothing wrong with someone creating an artwork that has elements of violence to it.
My opinion is more nuanced than just "You should use Substack", in fact I think you shouldn't use Substack (self-host, if possible), but I don't see the value in piling onto platforms either because of apparently a few very unpleasant accounts (when historically that hasn't gone anywhere good).
Of course, like Elizabeth, I also have to question whether nit-picking a few accounts posting, alright, very offensive content, isn't doing a disservice to free expression (particularly when you consider how over the top Big Tech has gone). Is it really contributing?
Setting policies, quietly "reinterpreting policies" (to avoid the embarrassment of publicly backing down), these are like Big Tech shenanigans, and not particularly fun ones.
It's not even particularly good for free speech. The approach of the neutral hoster might be better (and would include things related to sex) than acting as if they're out there to save journalism.
It's also the sort of platform that is entirely optional.
At the end of the day, Substack is a blog hosting platform too. A blog is far easier to self-host than any of these other things.
It's not really clear why someone really needs yet another middleman coming along here. It's even less clear when using that middleman involves getting dragged into that middleman's own political drama.
At the end of the day, someone just wants to host a blog. Why so many games?
Software Engineer. Psy / Tech / Sex Science Enthusiast. Controversial?
Free Expression. Human rights / Civil Liberties. Anime. Liberal.