this post was submitted on 31 Aug 2023
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it's crazy that "it's too hard :(" has become an acceptable justification for just ignoring the law within tech circles
It's more like the law is saying you must draw seven red lines, all of them strictly perpendicular, some with green ink and some with transparent ink.
It's not "virtually" impossible, it's literally impossible. If the law requires that it be possible then it's the law that must change. Otherwise it's simply a more complicated way of banning AI entirely, which means that some other jurisdiction will become the world leader in such things.
How is "don't rely on content you have no right to use" litteraly impossible?
We teach to children that there is a Google filter to include only the CC images (that they should use for their presentations).
Also it's not like we are talking small companies here, a new billion-making industry is being born and it could totally afford contracts with big platforms that would allow to use their content.
At the time they used the data, they had a right to use it. The participants later revoked their consent for their data to be used, after the model was already trained at an enormous cost.
I have to admit my comment is not really relevant to the article itself (also, I read only the free part of it).
It was more a reaction to the comment above, which felt more generic. My concern about LLMs is that I could never find an auditable list of websites that were crawled, which would be reasonable to ask for, I think.