• FiniteBanjo@lemmy.today
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    1 year ago

    They exist at the current scale because we’re not regulating them, not whether we like it or not.

    • MudMan@fedia.io
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      1 year ago

      Absolutely not true. Regulations are both in place and in development, and none of them seem like they would prevent any of the applications currently in the market. I know the fearmongering side keeps arguing that a copyright case will stop the development of these but, to be clear, that’s not going to happen. All it’ll take is an extra line in an EULA to mitigate or investing in the dataset of someone who has a line in their EULA (Twitter, Reddit already, more to come for sure). The industry is actually quite fond of copyright-based training restrictions, as their main effect is most likely to be to close off open source alternatives and make it so that only Meta, Google, and MS/OpenAI can afford model training.

      These are super not going away. Regulation is needed, but it’s not restricting or eliminating these applications in any way that would make a dent on the also poorly understood power consumption costs.