This actually works I think.This is why we should support the good drug cartels. We don’t want the bad ones to get edge on the market first.
Funny, China might be just as bad as the US in the end on AI, but at least they are giving lip service to the ethics of AI and global standards vs the US model of “I’m a tech CEO, trust me, but don’t regulate me…”.
ITT: Tons of people who are absolutely mistaken that this case is about whether LLMs by their very nature violate copyright. Except that this same court case has already adjudicated that it is not, and that the model's use of training data is transformative and fair use (you may disagree, but regards to this case it's a settled issue).
For some additional perspective, consider that you’ve spent the last few months ruining any perceived advantage the US ever had over any country, let alone China (the country that singlehandedly facilitates your day-to-day). America is a failed state that finds itself careening into full throated fascism, which nobody respects. Your military hasn’t had success on the battlefield since 1945, no one is afraid of your hard power anymore. Soft power? Literally evaporated within a week of Trump taking over. Your entire economy is just… fraud. Who cares how many trump bucks the plagiarism machine is worth? The Chinese don’t, I’ll tell you that much.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Coalition_of_the_Gulf_WarI don't disagree with all of your comment, but it is rather comical that you seem to be unaware of, for just one example, the US military liberating a country halfway around the world in 6 weeks, with fewer than 300 fatalities, in 1991.
That's "hard power" to a degree that no other country in human history has exhibited.
The United States retains the military capacity to conquer all but a handful of nations. Occupying, administering, and pacifying such a territory after an invasion, however, turns out to be extremely difficult, as just about everyone has discovered since the Colonial era.
I'm also just gonna mention that the US prevailing against an enemy that's 75 years or more behind the US technologically isn't all that special. Especially when the end result is a massive failure with nothing good to show for the effort. It's every bit as special as Israel slaughtering defenseless Palestinians in pursuit of outright genocide, with a similar mismatch in capabilities.I'm just going to say that becoming so defensive that you have to point to the US leading a very large coalition against a much smaller belligerent in defence of an even smaller victim as the only great sign of US military hard power since the end of the second world war is not the argument you think it is. I would also note that while the initial Gulf War had less than 300 coalition deaths (plus over 400 from the Kuwaiti military), that led directly to a decade long slog of an occupation that resulted in 4800 military deaths among coalition members.
Then you get into all of the knock-on effects of the American-led occupation and one thing remains true over the last century: with the possible exception of the Korean War, basically every time the US intervenes with its military, it leaves the region (if not the entire world) in a much worse state.
I am not defensive, merely educating a few people on some events that ought not to have escaped their notice.
And again, this military action was and remains unprecedented in human history.
And that's just one example, not the only one.
As I already explained, liberating or conquering a country is very different from subsequently controlling it -- as all of post-Colonial history demonstrates.
That's occurred in almost every military conflict, nearly by definition.
was and remains unprecedented
Which is it?just one example, not the only one
Hahahahaha!I don't disagree with all of your comment, but it is rather comical that you seem to be unaware of, for just one example, the US military liberating a country halfway around the world in 6 weeks, with fewer than 300 fatalities, in 1991.
That's "hard power" to a degree that no other country in human history has exhibited.
The United States retains the military capacity to conquer all but a handful of nations. Occupying, administering, and pacifying such a territory after an invasion, however, turns out to be extremely difficult, as just about everyone has discovered since the Colonial era.
If this is your sincere belief, you have been lead astray by a cadre of stupid racists who can’t even spell AI.
If you don’t enforce copyright law, how are you any different from “the Chinese” that you fear? The ones who “don’t value” copyright? What makes your copyright violations ok? Is it maybe, perhaps, just that you’re also a racist who’s afraid of $current_targeted_racial_group because deep down you know how mediocre you and your country folk are? I hope not! I think you’re better than that.
For some additional perspective, consider that you’ve spent the last few months ruining any perceived advantage the US ever had over any country, let alone China (the country that singlehandedly facilitates your day-to-day). America is a failed state that finds itself careening into full throated fascism, which nobody respects. Your military hasn’t had success on the battlefield since 1945, no one is afraid of your hard power anymore. Soft power? Literally evaporated within a week of Trump taking over. Your entire economy is just… fraud. Who cares how many trump bucks the plagiarism machine is worth? The Chinese don’t, I’ll tell you that much.
They need to work children in here somehow. Because someone needs to think of the children.
Their entire argument is essentially "this will bankrupt us so please don't let it happen". That... cannot possibly hold up. It hasn't been a problem for individuals hit with copyright infringement, at least.
Why hasn't "big tech" gone after "big copyright" with this, anyway? If copyrights cause so much trouble for them, they ought to be arguing and lobbying that copyrights are too long.
Why should the Palestinians leave an area that they have called home for at least as long as the Israelis have?Many other countries in that area could offer a home to Palestinians -- but they don't, because Palestinians are more valuable to their cause as martyrs than as human beings.
ITT: Tons of people who are absolutely mistaken that this case is about whether LLMs by their very nature violate copyright. Except that this same court case has already adjudicated that it is not, and that the model's use of training data is transformative and fair use (you may disagree, but regards to this case it's a settled issue). Not even the plaintiffs, per the judge in a previous decision a couple months back, alleged otherwise. What Anthropic is being found liable for is a thoroughly conventional copyright issue. They have used the strategy of buying, digitizing, then destroying books--and if they stuck to that, they'd also have been in the clear. Their problem is that they just started outright stealing shit and retaining it. And they are going to lose, because despite any pleading about them being special AI snowflakes, it is, again, a thoroughly conventional copyright issue. This article is purely about how bad/chaotic it will be when they lose because of the issues surrounding class certification. That's all.
The US hasn't done that either. You're forced to gerrymander their "victory" by roping off the dismal failure of the entire enterprise.It is not hard to understand, for those not being willfully obtuse.
No other country has liberated -- or conquered -- a country on the other side of the planet, in six weeks, with just a few hundred casualties.
That was and is unprecedented.
That is only one example of US military action since WW2, and the vast majority have been successful from a combat standpoint.
Do you understand now?
The world would be better off eliminating that residency altogether.Because that area lacks the resources to provide for their survival.
And because those Palestinians could live in perfect safety in any one of dozens of other countries.
You do hopefully recall why Israelis are forced to live in that spot -- because they have no other choice, on the planet.
Because that area lacks the resources to provide for their survival.
And because those Palestinians could live in perfect safety in any one of dozens of other countries.
You do hopefully recall why Israelis are forced to live in that spot -- because they have no other choice, on the planet.
Fuck I wish this was still the 90's and techies were still anti-copyright.
Gaza is entirely dependent on imports.
There is no place that Israelis can be moved to. Do you seriously not recall WW2?
Do you seriously not recall that a Nazi just bought the US President?
The US -- like just about every country that isn't Israel -- is rife with antisemitism.
No, Israel exists because the Arabs in British Palestine sided with the NAZIs in WWII out of fear that the Allies would continue to allow zionists to use terror as a way of gaining ground in the region. As punishment for that, they lost significant portions of land that they had owned for centuries and were divided into three, widely separated regions, making it very hard for them to defend themselves.There is no US state that would accept Israel's population as refugees. And if one did, they'd be under attack constantly. This is why Israel exists.
More gerrymandering. Including a complete redefinition of what the failed conflict was about.How many aircraft were destroyed pre and post invasion?
Does Iraq control Kuwait today?
You're complaining about me being "forced" into a position, and you're resorting to speculation about what might happen in a completely different conflict?
I hope you can do better.
I’m curious…Do you, um…Do you actually know how private companies are “valued”?wtf kinda click bait title is this shit, lol, "AI industry horrified" - got a source for that nonsense?
What the hell makes you think the industry is terrified of this one copyright case? It's not even about the training, it's the pirating of the content that this case is about... This is going to end up settling out of court, lawyers will get a massive payout, and 'authors' who register will get their 5 dollar check in 3 years or so.
The US is pushing hundreds of billions into corporate AI now. They're not going to shoot down the whole industry because a class action of authors is complaining. Anybody who thinks NOW THIS WILL END AI is just lying to themselves or huffing too much social media hopium (Ars is famous for this, they've been parroting the 'AI is a useless bubble' for years now, ya'll still holding your breath for that collapse???)
Most valuable private company in the world is OpenAI now, like it or not. You're not going to hamstring the entire US economy and handing over the next arms race to the Chinese over copyright. Too much money and power involved.