• Ulu-Mulu-no-die
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    41 year ago

    Regulating doesn’t mean blocking, AI needs to be regulated, it should have been already done, look at stuff like deep fakes, some done even with dead people, fakes with actors faces and voices without their consent, and so on, it’s not just about training, it’s also about how the results are effectively used.

    And the fact the training is expensive doesn’t mean everyone should have free reign about it, especially when noone cares about the reliability of the datasets they’re using, of the ethical aspects of it.

    As for reddit, we’ve been already shafted, that’s why we’re on lemmy now.

    • @Grimy@lemmy.world
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      21 year ago

      You mentioned regulating right after scraping so I thought it pertained to that.

      Also when I say expensive, I mean prohibitively so in a way that creates a soft monopoly. And when you couple that with the very real possibility that AI replaces most desk work in the coming decades, its bleak.

      That being said, I totally agree deepfakes and all that need to be regulated but only on the platforms distributing it imo. Most seem to want to regulate how the technology itself works, gimping it and forcing filters on the user. All of which can really only be done by stopping users from running it locally.

      I think anything other than the lightest touch would be disastrous for both us and the product.

      I’m curious where you would start. I have some thoughts but mainly only a strict opt out policy for individuals.