Gsus4

joined 1 year ago
[–] [email protected] 5 points 15 hours ago (1 children)

Web 4.0: I can actually safely tip every dude who made a useful video/website 0.01 cents and neither side will have to pay any extra fees so it is actually worth to tip, it will just be p2p money using the processing power of the sender and the receiver without buttcoin vultures trying to fuck with it. That was what web 3.0 was supposed to have been 13 years ago, but between the technical limitations and those web3 shitasses' greed, we're left almost where we started...

[–] [email protected] 0 points 1 week ago* (last edited 1 week ago) (2 children)

This is not like reading a book from a library...unless you want to force the LLM to only train one book per day and keep no copies after that day.

[–] [email protected] 3 points 1 week ago* (last edited 1 week ago) (6 children)

The matter is not LLMs reproducing what they have learned, it is that they didn't pay for the books they read, like people are supposed to do legally.

This is not about free use, this is about free access, which at the scale of an individual reading books is marketed as "piracy"...at the scale of reading all books known to man...it's onmipiracy?

We need some kind of deal where commercial LLMs have to pay a rent to a fund that distributes that among creators or remain nonprofit, which is never gonnna happen, because it'll be a bummer for all the grifters rushing into that industry.

[–] [email protected] 4 points 2 weeks ago* (last edited 2 weeks ago)

Sometimes it leads me wildly astray when I do that, like a really bad tutor...but it is good if you want a refresher and can spot the bullshit on the side. It is good for spotting things that you didnt know before and can factcheck afterwards.

...but maybe other review papers and textbooks are still better...

[–] [email protected] 7 points 2 weeks ago* (last edited 2 weeks ago) (1 children)

they don't need to, they just need to seize the ground PoPs and block ips to make it unusably slow.

[–] [email protected] 2 points 2 weeks ago

Twitter's format feels a bit like yelling into the void and waiting for replies...you may luck out and get some engagement from a hub or a small subgraph of the network. Mastodon makes that stronger by removing the algorithm (I'd like there to be a user-customizable feed sort algo by an array of parameters, not sure what the technical limitations to that are: processing, security?)

Comment trees feel better (to me at least), because there is a hierarchical origin, a native indexing by topic>post>comment>countercomment...it sort of resembles how we relate with the world or navigate maps.

[–] [email protected] 2 points 3 weeks ago* (last edited 2 weeks ago)

I'd like an indexer good enough to show me real music close enough to what I get generatively from a suno.com prompt. :3

[–] [email protected] 8 points 3 weeks ago

my hero 😎

[–] [email protected] 124 points 3 weeks ago* (last edited 3 weeks ago)

That's one of the things I love in lemmy. Moderation transparency.

 

Each city has a different mix of subcultures. Some cities are impersonal with posers and businesslike like Linkedin, some may be more of a disjoint cacophony like reddit or an aged police state dystopia like facebook...which ones have the vibe of Lemmy?

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