▲ | noitpmeder 7 months ago | ||||||||||||||||
That's a good thing! If a company cannot raise to fame unless they violate laws, it should not have been there. There is plenty of public domain text that could have taught a LLM English. | |||||||||||||||||
▲ | suby 7 months ago | parent | next [-] | ||||||||||||||||
I'm not convinced that the economic harm to content creators is greater than the productivity gains and accessibility of knowledge for users (relative to how competent it would be if trained just on public domain text). Personally, I derive immense value from ChatGPT / Claude. It's borderline life changing for me. As time goes on, I imagine that it'll increasingly be the case that these LLM's will displace people out of their jobs / careers. I don't know whether the harm done will be greater than the benefit to society. I'm sure the answer will depend on who it is that you ask. > That's a good thing! If a company cannot raise to fame unless they violate laws, it should not have been there. Obviously given what I wrote above, I'd consider it a bad thing if LLM tech severely regressed due to copyright law. Laws are not inherently good or bad. I think you can make a good argument that this tech will be a net negative for society, but I don't think it's valid to do so just on the basis that it is breaking the law as it is today. | |||||||||||||||||
| |||||||||||||||||
▲ | YetAnotherNick 7 months ago | parent | prev [-] | ||||||||||||||||
> unless they violate laws *unless they violate country laws. Which means openAI or its alternative could survive in China but not in US. The question is that if we are fine with it? |