Oh i was mostly joking. I've been on the fence about buying one as i could make housings for electronics and radio projects i design and build. Maybe end of the year.
This feels like a solution to a non-problem. When a person asks the AI "give me X copyrighted text" no one should be expecting this to be new works. Why is asking ChatGPT for lyrics bad while asking a human ok?
It seems like people are afraid that AI can do it when i can do it too. But their reason for freaking out is....??? It's not like AI is calling up publishers trying to get Harry Potter 8 published. If i ask it to create Harry Potter 1 but change his name to Gary Trotter it's not the AI that is doing something bad, it's me.
That was my point. I can memorize text and its only when I play it off as my own that it's wrong. No one cares that I memorized the first chapter and can recite it if I'm not trying to steal it.
But no one is complaining about publishing derived work. The issue is that "the robot brain has full copies of my text and anything it creates 'cannot be transformative'". This doesn't make sense to me because my brain made a copy of your book too, its just really lossy.
I think right now we have definitions for the types of works that only loosely fit human actions mostly because we make poor assumptions of how the human brain works. We often look at intent as a guide which doesn't always work in an AI scenario.
We are making an assumption that humans do "human things". If i wrote a derivative work of your $12 book, does it matter that the way i wrote it was to use a pen and paper and create a statistical analysis of your work and find the "next best word" until i had a story? Sure my book took 30 years to write but if i followed the same math as an AI would that matter?
The slippery slope here is that we are currently considering humans and computers to be different because (something someone needs to actually define). If you say "AI read my book and output a similar story, you owe me money" then how is that different from "Joe read my book and wrote a similar story, you owe me money." We have laws already that deal with this but honestly how many books and movies aren't just remakes of Romeo and Juliet or Taming of the Shrew?!?
Typically the argument has been "a robot can't make transformative works because it's a robot." People think our brains are special when in reality they are just really lossy.
Just recently picked up an RG353V. Works great though I have come to realize that the GameBoy form factor doesn't do well for dual analog sticks and trigger buttons. Playing Doom on it runs amazing but the way you hold it feels off. Same process as the landscape devices, pressed between your palms, but it feels less stable.
Other than that I've been basically playing it every night.
I think your examples aren't as "normal" as you think.
Yes one can gain experience but unless it's experience to rise above your position it shouldn't be viewed as a benefit. One would expect of you're working in a kitchen to learn how to cook. The situations where you're actually gaining from your job is when you gain experience that actually advances your career. I've interviewed a lot of people in many varying fields and this doesn't happen as often as one would hope.
And the compensation is not anywhere close to allowing people to move out of their situation. I've moved out of state before and if it wasn't for the fact my current job at the time allowed me to move and keep the same role it would have been extremely difficult. Financially we are talking moving costs, first/last/security on a new place, starting all utilities, etc and chances are your old place won't refund anything. In 2015 moving two of us a state over and doing it all by myself (no movers) we were still looking at a couple grand once you include rentals, gas, etc. If you're already living paycheck to paycheck that's not even possible. Took me over a year of saving with a good paying job to not have that kill us.
Capitalism in no way makes the worker's life easy. We pretend like they benefit from it but that's only as far as their boss is willing to allow it.
I don’t think that the answer is communism,
I agree. The issue is that in the US capitalism already controls our government. Take healthcare for example. Let's say we move to a single payer system. This would mean that the government would select some entity to define the costs of all medical procedures. And who do you think the current federal leaders are going to pick? Someone who is going to look out for those groups who currently line the pockets of the politicians such as Big Pharma and Big Medicine. Rather than saying the cost of materials for an arm cast comes to $10USD they will opt for every crazy extra the hospitals charge today. The $30 arm cast will become $300 because those who make the money on medical pay the politicians to allow them to continue to make money.
Now how do we do this with business and the economy. We currently see with capitalism that only in the extremely rare cases of monopolies does the government truly come in and enforce regulations. We have laws about pollution and yet they allow for Cap and Trade rather than just forcing everyone to be good. We see labor laws that stop horrible things from happening but God forbid they pass a tax bill that says "you must spend this rebate on your employees direct paychecks." Nope it all goes to shareholders. Our government is impotent and cannot actually help the middle class. At least not in it's current state.
It wouldn't work because capitalism requires the inherent greed.
If a business was run in a way that it intentionally stopped growth at a sustainable level where all employees were paid a good living wage then you'd basically be doing Communism. Sure the means of production would be owned by some individual or company but the whole point of the system is to not look at employees like a commodity. In capitalism employees are just like the machines they use to do their job.
The difference is that you often don't achieve the higher levels of those professions being a one person team. At that point you need others to work for you and in only the most extreme cases does the profits get spread evenly.
Now don't get me wrong, the owner of the business does take on responsibilities and risks the employees don't but at some point you'd expect those costs to drop down to nearly nothing. Instead the business grows, more risk and all the employees stay at the level of benefit while the owner's benefit increases.
What's even more crazy is when you've used vim exclusively for 30 years to the point where you sit down at someone else's computer and you try to use their editor and you are completely lost. You fumble around like you're an elderly person who doesn't know what a computer is, type random letters all over. You look senile.
But then you show them on your computer how you can record a macro of your key commands and then use a regex to match different blocks of similar text and apply the same commands all at once. And because you used navigation based on words and lines rather than characters it all just works.
First there isn't any sort of message history or sequencing beyond what is implemented on a server. For IM if your phone is off and you turn it back on all the messages you miss are sent to you. This requires each message to be stored in a database or semi long term storage, keeping track of if everyone in the group had confirmed receiving it. IRC doesn't track any of that, if you're not connected you miss out which makes IRC have a lot less overhead.
The other difference is that server to server was a concept for building a network of location based servers for a single network. Its not federation, but handling user overhead. You don't have random individuals running their own servers on subpar hardware causing undue stress on the network. You dont have thousands of instances with huge degrees of latency difference to deal with. Server to server was made so you could connect to east.myirc.co and west.myirc.co.
Oh i was mostly joking. I've been on the fence about buying one as i could make housings for electronics and radio projects i design and build. Maybe end of the year.