VerbFlow

joined 10 months ago
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[–] [email protected] 1 points 1 day ago

From what I've heard, Boeing weapons that don't get built are even safer!

[–] [email protected] 1 points 1 day ago

Would this endanger national security? I was going to say so, but I'm not sure about the details.

[–] [email protected] -1 points 4 days ago* (last edited 4 days ago) (2 children)

Unless you shoot them first. Edit: please don't shoot anyone. This is not a call for violence

[–] [email protected] 2 points 4 days ago

And the reason things are so bleak is because most people only have words to go off of, rather than actions.

[–] [email protected] 1 points 4 days ago (1 children)

Showing up to a protest is also an action. So is smashing someone's car. Do you think you can feed the hungry purely by posting thoughts on social media?

[–] [email protected] -4 points 6 days ago (1 children)

I don't care. The United States has been the main perpetrator of countless war crimes across the world. It has been born out of slavery, its land is built on the Natives that were once thriving, it has forced territories under its laws without representation, it has been an apartheid state with white people ruling over colored people, it has installed countless dictatorships to protect its economic interests, its "democracy" is a sham and the Netherlands did it first, it is chiefly responsible for crimes against peace and humanity in Vietnam and Iraq, its citizens are subject to total surveillance while many of them have a lack of water, food, and shelter, its government is bribed constantly by price-gouging corporations, it will gladly use military equipment on its own citizens, and it has strived against democratic elections that are inconvenient. The United States ought to be split up into all of its independent states so the world may be free of its tyranny.

 

I know this sounds pretentious (which is quite ironic), but this is something I've noticed about the internet. You never read about what someone does, only what they say. You hear politicians claim that they'll fix the economy, or celebrities make speeches about what they feel like, or what "message" a fictional movie has being discussed over and over, but none of that matters, because it's all saying and no doing!

[–] [email protected] 1 points 6 days ago

Oh fuck, I forgot

[–] [email protected] 2 points 6 days ago

I can't wait to type out all this stuff! DOPG Nd;oGNB [AJNGO[RFOHG[APFNH]GJSsahlitnolbn;'s

[–] [email protected] 28 points 6 days ago (2 children)

I blame the attempt to make devices user-friendly. Convenience kills skill.

[–] [email protected] 8 points 6 days ago (3 children)

I hate it, but it's preferable to Anarcho-Capitalism.

 

I made this myself on GIMP with some wallpaper

[–] [email protected] 2 points 6 days ago

It wasn't a burn, it was just the obvious truth.

[–] [email protected] 3 points 1 week ago

Yeah, Drumpf is too old for office and can't understand how money works imo. It's not even the Dictatorship On Day One deal. Julius Caesar and Napoleon Bonaparte could, at least, solve a great many of their people's problems. Drumpf and Vance aren't even doing that. It's a bit exhausting having almost every U.S. politician cramming into the D-Party, but after this whole fiasco, it'll split up.

 

I recieved a comment from someone telling me that one of my posts had bad definitions, and he was right. Despite the massive problems caused by AI, it's important to specify what an AI does, how it is used, for what reason, and what type of people use it. I suppose judges might already be doing this, but regardless, an AI used by one dude for personal entertainment is different than a program used by a megacorporation to replace human workers, and must be judged differently. Here, then, are some specifications. If these are still too vague, please help with them.

a. What does the AI do?

  1. It takes in a dataset of images, specified by a prompt, and compiles them into a single image thru programming (like StaDiff, Dall-E, &c);
  2. It takes in a dataset of text, specified by a prompt, and compiles that into a single string of text (like ChatGPT, Gemini, &c);
  3. It takes in a dataset of sound samples, specified by a prompt, and compiles that into a single sound (like AIVA, MuseNet, &c).

b. What is the AI used for?

  1. It is used for drollery (applicable to a1 and a2);
  2. It is used for pornography (a1);
  3. It is used to replace stock images (a1);
  4. It is used to write apologies (a2);
  5. It is used to write scientific papers (this actually happened. a2);
  6. It is used to replace illustration that the user would've done themselves (a1);
  7. It is used to replace illustration by a wage-laborer (a1);
  8. It is used to write physical books to print out (a2);
  9. It is used to mock and degrade persons (a1, a3);
  10. It is used to mock and degrade persons sexually (a1, a3);
  11. It is used for propaganda (a1, a2, a3).

c. Who is using the AI?

  1. A lower-class to middle-class person;
  2. An upper-class person;
  3. A small business;
  4. A large business;
  5. An anonymous person;
  6. An organization dedicated to shifting public perception.

This was really tough to do. I'll see if I can touch up on it myself. As of now, Lemmy cannot do lists in lists.

 

I was originally going to put this into the Log, but it might be unwelcome.

You want a way to rattle image-generation Boosters? Most of the arguments they use can be used to defend Googling an image and putting a filter over it.

  • "All forms of media take inspiration from one another, so that means it's fine to Google another image, download it, and apply a filter to call it mine!"
  • "Artists are really privilieged, so it's morally OK to take their art and filter it!"
  • "Using filtered images I downloaded from Google for game sprites will help me finish my game faster!"
  • "I suck at drawing, so I have to resort to taking images from people who can draw and filtering them!"
  • "People saying that my filtered images aren't art are tyrannical! I deserve to have my filtered images be seen as equal to hand-drawn ones!"

AI Boosters use a standard motte-and-bailey doctrine to assert the right to steal art and put it into a dataset, yet entice people to buy their generated images. When Boosters want people to invest in AI, they occupy the bailey and say that "AI is faster and better than drawing by hand". When Boosters are confronted with their ethical problems, as shown above, they retreat into the motte and complain that "it takes tons of time and work to make the AI do what I want". Remember this when you find Boosters. Or don't, since I doubt the sites where they lurk are worth your time.

 

First of all, this c has absolutely skyrocketed in the coming years. I made it in a panic. (I was worried that AI would bedazzle everyone, everyone would be onboard, and it would ruin everything forever.) Although a lot of what I feared didn't happen, I'm still glad to have made this thing.

I don't know if this sub is going to be brigaded by Boosters like it was early on, or if they'll try some sort of cyberattack, but the reason I appointed so many moderators was because I was worried that Boosters would come in, try some bad-faith tactics, and screw over any resistance against AI.

I now realize that having a pro-AI "camp" is misleading. Adopting any new technology must prove itself to be worth its cost. There have been patents, like Flexplay, or Tetraethyllead, that are not worth their cost. What Boosters are saying is that, if you oppose the use of Flexplay of Tetraethyllead, you are in an "anti-Flexplay" or "anti-Tetraethyllead" camp, and if you can't come up with a convincing argument against it, you should just accept the technology.

Since it's been a while since my last log, and the c has changed, I don't think this will be brigaded.

 

It's really cool seeing all this old stuff. These are still downloadable, by the way.

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