Comment by ben_w

Comment by ben_w a day ago

1 reply

> From transistors to transformers, most of it builds on the foundation that comes guess from where. The innovative layer you speak of is fairly thin.

China rises to first place in most cited papers: https://www.science.org/content/article/china-rises-first-pl...

> 1) “AI” is a meaningless term (let it be my revenge for consciousness)

Fair.

But let's say "computer program" in that case. I'm not fussed about definitions.

> 2) a tool without agency or will should not be X in a sentence “X can Y”. Sure, we can maybe on occasion say “hammers can break things”, but if hammers having agency and will was a popular misconception then I would definitely prefer to stick to “hammers can be used to break things”.

Careful.

If you say that humans can only create things with copyright (even if to support copyleft), then the proletariat are the tool that the bourgeois use to create things.

I do not think this is what you intended :P

> That aside, I believe lack of copyright enforcement discourages the creation of new works even in presence of these tools, through the mechanism known as “why would I put effort into new work if I don’t effectively own the result”.

Same reason you commission a work, or even just buy it from a shop: because then you have the thing.

I mean, the cost of getting o3 to create a novel worth of text is about the same as the price of a generic book by an unknown author in a second-hand shop: https://openai.com/api/pricing/

I've not tried o3 yet, but I have tried o1, and as I've said on a different thread today, o1's output is merely OK, not worth publishing as a book — and I don't know how long it will take to get there. But it is displacing blog writers and podcast writers: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=44287953

> but it would be moot because we would also be ethically compelled to not subject it to the training and use that enables such recitation in the first place.

Surprising.

While I would seriously consider the possibility it may be unethical to force such an AI to work if it didn't want to, I think giving it the capability, the education, to be capable of making that choice rather than just saying "it doesn't matter if I wanted to or not, I can't", is just education, as per our own.

Still, I think that's coherent. I'm not sure I've fully internalised the implications so I will let it be.

strogonoff a day ago

> https://www.science.org/content/article/china-rises-first-pl...

Per capita?

> If you say that humans can only create things with copyright (even if to support copyleft), then the proletariat are the tool that the bourgeois use to create things.

The wealth gap and the divide is unlikely to be helped if more people are going to be using (and paying for, in whatever way) ML-based tech from a handful of large corporations.

> Same reason you commission a work, or even just buy it from a shop: because then you have the thing.

Simple posession is more about physical necessities. Commissioning or buying artwork from someone is not just about posessing it, it comes with supporting someone financially. I could make icons or basic illustrations for some small project myself, but I would still commission them if I can afford it because that supports an artist who may want some work (as well as building up for more collaborations in future). Here, I would be supporting the opposite of those artists, a thing that was built on those artists’ work without their consent. Some middleman megacorp of the worst kind.

> the cost of getting o3 to

Don’t they operate at a loss for the time being? They will have to make money sooner or later.

> While I would seriously consider the possibility it may be unethical to force such an AI to work if it didn't want to, I think giving it the capability, the education, to be capable of making that choice rather than just saying "it doesn't matter if I wanted to or not, I can't", is just education, as per our own.

This goes way beyond my thought. I assume if we are talking about education it would be a given that running it generating images 24/7 non stop, shutting it down/killing it, etc., is already out of the question.