kibiz0r

joined 1 year ago
[–] kibiz0r@midwest.social 1 points 2 months ago (1 children)

I kinda doubt anyone is getting “fooled” by these at this point, though that is a whole nother layer of horrible hell in store for us…

Right now, we’re dealing with the most basic questions:

  • Is it immoral (and/or should it be illegal) for people to be trading pornographic approximations of you?
  • Is it immoral (and/or should it be illegal) for people to privately make pornographic approximations of you?
  • Is it immoral (and/or should it be illegal) to distribute software which allows people to make pornographic approximations of others?
[–] kibiz0r@midwest.social -3 points 2 months ago

Barely enough for the OS and one app

[–] kibiz0r@midwest.social 10 points 2 months ago

In one news release, Realpage offered its property management clients the ability to outsource daily rent-setting and revenue oversight. “We believe in overseeing properties as though we own them ourselves,” the company said in a presentation that plaintiffs’ lawyers referenced in the lawsuit.

A leasing manager at a RealPage client said, “I knew [RealPage’s prices] were way too high, but [RealPage] barely budged” when the manager asked to deviate from the suggested rent.

An update to the software tracked not only clients’ acceptance rate, but also the identity of the landlords’ staff members who had requested a deviation from RealPage’s price, the lawsuit said. Compensation for some property management personnel was even tied to compliance with the company’s recommendations, it said.

The Washington lawsuit alleged that the system was designed to police compliance of the cartel. It cited RealPage training documents that urged clients to have the “discipline” to enact the software’s pricing suggestions 90% of the time or more. Training documents encouraged regional rental managers to beware of “‘rogue’ leasing agents who too frequently override” the software’s recommended prices. Rejections would also often trigger outreach from a RealPage pricing advisor, the suit said.

[–] kibiz0r@midwest.social 2 points 2 months ago (2 children)

✅ “What it looks like”

✅ “How it looks”

🚫 “How it looks like”

[–] kibiz0r@midwest.social 8 points 3 months ago

Splatoon is great if you have Switches.

Helldivers 2 is PvE but is a great group experience.

Extraction shooters might be a thing? Hunt: Showdown?

[–] kibiz0r@midwest.social 34 points 3 months ago (2 children)

Aren’t MP3s just a statistical correlation?

Besides, you really don’t need to zoom in on “but muh license agreement” to roast these AI turds.

They’re very clear: We’re gonna put creatives out of work, we’re gonna sell a unified product to replace them, and we’re gonna use their own labor to build their replacements.

That’s anticompetitive.

Nail em on that instead of trying to thread the needle on reining in the tech lords without damaging e.g. linguistic analysis researchers.

[–] kibiz0r@midwest.social 8 points 3 months ago

We might as well ditch the modern concept of copyright as far as I’m concerned.

Cuz there’s no good outcome to this case if copyright is our only weapon to counter the technofeudalists.

They’re very clear in their aim: Every book a human makes will be used in an effort to replace the human that made the book.

Who gives a shit if that’s through statistics or black magic? It’s anticompetitive behavior, plain and simple. Shoot them down on antitrust grounds.

If doubling the list of rights you sign away in an employment contract is the only way we’re allowed to mitigate this, then we’re fucked.

[–] kibiz0r@midwest.social 18 points 3 months ago

You’re free to say whatever you want. Nobody’s stopping you. But if you choose to work a job where 80% of it is talking, don’t be surprised when your performance is measured by what you say.

[–] kibiz0r@midwest.social 20 points 3 months ago* (last edited 3 months ago)

If you're looking for a universally-applicable moral framework, join the thousands of years of philosophers striving for the same.

If you're just looking for an explanation that allows you to put one foot in front of the other...

Laws exist for us to spell out the kind of society we'd like to live in. Generally, we prefer that individuals be able to participate in cultural conversations and offer their own viewpoint. And generally, we prefer that groups of people don't accumulate massive amounts of power over other groups of people.

Dedicating your life to copying another artist's style is participating in a cultural conversation, and you won't be able to help yourself from infusing your own lived experience into your work of copying the artist. If only by the details that you focus on getting exactly right, the slight mistakes that repeat themselves or morph over the course of your career, the pieces you prioritize replicating over and over again. It says something about who you are, and that's worth appreciating.

Now, if you're trying to pass those off as originals and not your own tributes, then you're deceiving people and that's a problem because you're damaging the cultural conversation by lying about the elements you're putting into it. Even so, sometimes that's an interesting artistic enterprise in itself. Such as when artists pretend to be someone else. Warhol was a fan of this. His whole career revolved around messing with concepts of authenticity in art.

As for power, you don't gain that much leverage over another artist by simply copying their work. And if you riff on it to upstage them, you're just inviting them to do the same to you in turn.

But if you can do that mechanically, quickly, so that any creative twist they put out there to undermine your attempts to upstage them, you have an instant response at little cost to yourself, now you're in a position of great power. The more the original artist produces, the stronger your advantage over them becomes. The more they try, the harder it is for them to win.

We don't generally like when someone has accumulated tons of power, especially when they subsequently use that power to prevent others from being able to compete.

Edit: I'd also caution against trying to make an objective test for whether a particular act of copying is "okay". This invites two things:

  1. Artists can't help but question what's acceptable and play around with it. They will deliberately transgress in order to make a point, and you'll be forced to admit that your objective test is worthless.

  2. Tech companies are relentlessly horny for this kind of objective legal framework, because they want to be able to algorithmically approach the line and fill its border to fractal levels of granularity without technically crossing the line. RealPage, DoorDash, Uber, Amazon, OpenAI all want "illegal" to be as precisely and quantitatively defined as possible, so that they can optimize for "barely legal".

[–] kibiz0r@midwest.social 124 points 3 months ago (7 children)

The specific question was “I support equal rights for the LGBTQ community”

  • 2021: 79% said yes
  • 2022: 81%
  • 2023: 84%
  • 2024: 80%

Seems early to assume an actual decline. 2023 might have been weird. Election years might be weird. Who knows? But it is worth keeping an eye on.

Side note: If your chart has two years, and an assigned color for each year… Don’t use both colors for both bars.

If not for this specific case being tied to some text about going down from 84 to 80, I would not have been able to understand the rest of the charts.

[–] kibiz0r@midwest.social 66 points 3 months ago (5 children)

Crash reporting, probably.

Tap for spoilerThey gonna rat you out to the feds if you divide by zero.

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