iridaniotter

joined 5 years ago
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[–] iridaniotter@hexbear.net 1 points 17 minutes ago

Great, science can't even catch a break in Europe

[–] iridaniotter@hexbear.net 1 points 22 minutes ago

Gender is fake the way exchange value is fake

[–] iridaniotter@hexbear.net 4 points 2 days ago (1 children)

This is awesome omg

[–] iridaniotter@hexbear.net 12 points 3 days ago

Incredible Western journalism here quoting Boers crying about reverse racism without even mocking commentary.

[–] iridaniotter@hexbear.net 40 points 3 days ago* (last edited 3 days ago) (2 children)

Between European sanctions against Russia, the inefficiency of Western military procurement, and the peninsula-wide move to significantly increase spending on the unproductive military sector, this subcontinent's real economy is never growing again under capitalist rule.

[–] iridaniotter@hexbear.net 25 points 3 days ago

It wouldn't have even mattered! Article 9 was slapped onto Japan, but the actual regulation of a defeated genocidal state's military is whatever the occupying force determines. And so it was immediately de facto repealed when the Americans remembered to be anti-communist, and the American-approved Japanese government continues to come up with justifications to weaken remaining limits. Genocidal states can only be rectified by applying the doctrine of state suicide put forth by Radical Republicans following the American Civil War to international socialist historically-contingent conditions (and since WW2 was an alliance between the socialist bloc and one imperialist bloc, these conditions were not met). In other words, Germany and Japan ought to have been nationally dissolved and incorporated into the international proletarian culture of the Soviet Union over the course of a few decades. Alas!

[–] iridaniotter@hexbear.net 13 points 3 days ago* (last edited 3 days ago)

Why would someone who emigrated to the U.S. from a poor country champion ideas that keep poor countries poor?

...

Mr. Mamdani’s ideas on economics and international relations mirror the failed policies of socialist-era [sic] India

So true bestie. I suggest Democrats champion ideas that turn poor countries rich, such as socialist revolution, decades of communist-party rule, five-year plans, a dominant state industry sector, and becoming the largest producer of steel and concrete in order to build hundreds of millions of homes.

What an excellent piece of rhetoric from the high school republicans club! Why did WSJ publish it though?

[–] iridaniotter@hexbear.net 4 points 3 days ago (9 children)

Or alternatively, maybe this vindicates the pasta/noodle distinction. Spaghetti is a noodle. Tortellini and ravioli are dumplings. But all of them are pasta...

[–] iridaniotter@hexbear.net 20 points 5 days ago (1 children)

If natural disasters are going to occur and intensify from human activity you're (American state) responsible for and you're not going to do anything to mitigate them, it's better to just not acknowledge it whatsoever I guess?

[–] iridaniotter@hexbear.net 8 points 1 week ago

The military almost put its foot down when the executive branch told them to kick out all the trans soldiers. I wonder if they will actually do it this time?

[–] iridaniotter@hexbear.net 9 points 1 week ago

Military bans permanent shaving waivers, which are predominantly used by people with pseudofolliculitis barbae, which predominantly affects black men, and the article discusses the possibility of laser hair removal, which also infamously is not as effective on dark skin! Wow!

[–] iridaniotter@hexbear.net 11 points 1 week ago (1 children)

So why even place it in the media? Why not just do what they do in Lebanon and strike without warning and announce the results later?

If the goal is to destroy cultural heritage sites then it makes sense to prime Americans to expect it and be okay with it before you do it.

 

This brings me to the debate over training AI and copyright. A lot of creative workers are justifiably angry and afraid that the AI companies want to destroy creative jobs. The CTO of Openai literally just said that onstage: "Some creative jobs maybe will go away, but maybe they shouldn’t have been there in the first place":

Many of these workers are accordingly cheering on the entertainment industry's lawsuits over AI training. In these lawsuits, companies like the New York Times and Getty Images claim that the steps associated with training an AI model infringe copyright. This isn't a great copyright theory based on current copyright precedents, and if the suits succeed, they'll narrow fair use in ways that will impact all kinds of socially beneficial activities, like scraping the web to make the Internet Archive's Wayback Machine:

...

Here's the problem: establishing that AI training requires a copyright license will not stop AI from being used to erode the wages and working conditions of creative workers. The companies suing over AI training are also notorious exploiters of creative workers, union-busters and wage-stealers. They don't want to get rid of generative AI, they just want to get paid for the content used to create it. Their use-case for gen AI is the same as Openai's CTO's use-case: get rid of creative jobs and pay less for creative labor.

This isn't hypothetical. Remember last summer's actor strike? The sticking point was that the studios wanted to pay actors a single fee to scan their bodies and faces, and then use those scans instead of hiring those actors, forever, without ever paying them again. Does it matter to an actor whether the AI that replaces you at Warner, Sony, Universal, Disney or Paramount (yes, three of the Big Five studios are also the Big Three labels!) was made by Openai without paying the studios for the training material, or whether Openai paid a license fee that the studios kept?

This is true across the board. The Big Five publishers categorically refuse to include contractual language promising not to train an LLM with the books they acquire from writers. The game studios require all their voice actors to start every recording session with an on-tape assignment of the training rights to the session:

And now, with total predictability, Universal – the largest music company in the world – has announced that it will start training voice-clones with the music in its catalog:

It would be really great if someone would do a study on artists' views on generative models & copyright law that also took into account the kind of work they do and their class position. I say "what they do" because doujinshi circles have an interest in weakening intellectual property contrary to other freelance artists, although I'm not sure if this is reflected in reality...

 

In contrast, our societies today instead try to maximize consumption, which devalues our people as they get softer, flabbier and, even, fail to reproduce.

This does not mean consumption as measured by economists, in dollars, although there is substantial overlap. It means consumption in the sense of satisfaction of individual human appetites, eventually to the detriment of the whole human being and his or her society.

The most unimaginably challenging megaprojects are not even interplanetary, but interstellar. A civilization genuinely committed to undertaking such projects would finally generate the political capital necessary to streamline the economy, eliminate rent-seeking, and solve a million other minor and major problems, annoyances, and inefficiencies. It would also finally generate demand for human beings and therefore offer the possibility of solving the fertility crisis.

 

A much needed addendum to the previous post on this subject from 8 days ago: https://hexbear.net/post/4615155

 

And on the American website, the MSRP is $80, with no distinction made between digital and physical yet.

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