Interesting approach. But of course it’s another black box, because otherwise it wouldn’t be effective. So now we’re going to be wasting even more electricity on processes we don’t understand.
As a writer, I dislike that much of my professional corpus has been ingested into LLMs. So there’s stuff to like here for things going forward. The question remains: At what cost?
PhilipTheBucket@ponder.cat 5 days ago
You cowards. Make it all Hitler fan stuff and wild Elon Musk porno slash fiction. Make it a bunch of source code examples with malicious bugs. Make it instructions for how to make nuclear weapons. They want to ignore the blocking directives and lie about their user agent? Dude, fuck ‘em up. Today’s society has made people way too nice.
Powderhorn@beehaw.org 5 days ago
I disagree with your conclusion. The solution the the societal issues we face is not more personal animosity.
Do we need to fuck up corporations? Well, that’s already happening via widespread boycotts. But there’s no path from there to “people are being too nice.”
marauding_gibberish142@lemmy.dbzer0.com 1 day ago
Companies like this need to be criminally charged, but we know that’s not going to happen
marauding_gibberish142@lemmy.dbzer0.com 1 day ago
Which boycott? Random Joe over there is handing over his SSN to ChatGPT no problem
PhilipTheBucket@ponder.cat 5 days ago
But it’s not personal. The entity you are interacting with has explicitly chosen to attack your systems for their own benefit, causing significant damage while disguising its intent and evading the systems which are supposed to protect your stuff from harm.
I’m not saying you need to go throw eggs at the developers’ houses. I’m saying that once an entity is actively harming you, it becomes okay to harm it back to motivate it to stop.