• @aleph@lemm.ee
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      1 year ago

      Big tech companies making vast profits off of users providing data for free instead of paying workers wages in exchange for manufacturing goods is only going to deepen the disparity of wealth in society.

      What we desperately need is essentially a Digital Bill of Rights so that we can legally own our own data.

        • @aleph@lemm.ee
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          1 year ago

          Private ownership ≠ capitalism. Monopoly is a critique of free market capitalism, which naturally leads to a concentration of wealth for those who hold all the assets. Giving people ownership of their own data would help redistribute that wealth in a more equitable way.

          No, it won’t fix the underlying problem of Capitalism, but it would at least be a step in the right direction.

          • @General_Effort@lemmy.world
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            01 year ago

            Private ownership ≠ capitalism.

            Right. It’s private ownership of capital; aka the means of production. You’re saying that data should be owned because it can be used productively. That’s exactly capitalism for capitalism’s sake.

            This is a typical economically right-wing approach. There is a problem, so you just create a new kind of property and call it done. The magic of the market takes care of it, or something. I don’t understand why one would expect a different result from trying the same thing.

            • @aleph@lemm.ee
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              1 year ago

              The point of it is to redistribute wealth using the existing capitalist framework, which is a left-wing endeavour.

                • @aleph@lemm.ee
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                  41 year ago

                  Right, so instead of big tech companies keeping all the profits made from utilizing user data, a big chunk of it goes back into the pockets of the users themselves. Like a cooperative organization that shares profits with its workers.

          • @jaybone@lemmy.world
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            41 year ago

            It’s almost as if you could look at countries containing 1/6 of the world’s population and see where all of this is going.

      • @Aux@lemmy.world
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        -41 year ago

        You already own everything by default unless you forfeit your rights by implicitly accepting terms and conditions of a specific service.

        • @aleph@lemm.ee
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          1 year ago

          So basically don’t interact with 99% of online platforms, then?

          • @Aux@lemmy.world
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            -31 year ago

            Yes. That’s the whole point of them: you give away your information and most of your rights. Even if it’s something like Lemmy, open source, free, no ads, etc, you’re still forfeiting your rights. Because otherwise you cannot share anything publicly. Only private and inaccessible platforms can protect your rights. For example, a private Telegram channel protected by a password and with forced E2E encryption might protect your rights (I’m not sure about Telegram ToS, so I’m not 100% sure), but public platforms - never. They’re public, that’s the point.

    • @Grimy@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      The amount is incredibly vaste. If we go by quantity no one here is getting a dime, and if we go by quality…it’s probably the same. Not to mention the logistics of getting everyone their penny or two.

      And the data right now belongs to everyone. For example, Reddit technically ‘owns’ it’s content, but anyone can use it for ml purposes.

      It’s why a lot of these campaigns about data ownership are being pushed. If the gov passes laws, it won’t be to the benefit of the individual but the data aggregators like Reddit, Shutterstock, etc.

      They are playing on emotions and manipulating people into thinking killing AI FOSS and erecting data barriers is in their interest.

    • Turun
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      11 year ago

      I am watching a lot of YouTube. Premium would cost 13€/month, or 130€ if paid yearly. I use an ad blocker and don’t want any of the extra features that are provided to premium users. So until they manage to make unblockable ads, 130€/year could very reasonably be considered profit for the act of selling my data.

  • @cmrn@lemmy.world
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    431 year ago

    IMO it’s one thing if you posted things publicly on the internet and it’s getting scraped, in the same way a human would find it.

    But it’s disgusting when all these companies retroactively update their TOS, or force you into zero privacy to continue using their service.

    • archomrade [he/him]
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      1 year ago

      This is the entire issue for me.

      Privatizing what is otherwise public content, and then privatizing the models that are trained on that content and making me pay for having it regurgitated back at me.

      I think AI would be really cool, IF:

      • it wasn’t being shoved into every goddamn thing
      • it wasn’t being used as justification to cut jobs
      • it was a open source project and wasn’t being gatekept by capitalist interests
    • @Dkarma@lemmy.world
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      21 year ago

      How is the latter example different? You think they weren’t scraping your posts this whole time??? Just because they’re telling you now due to ai doesn’t mean they werent scraping B4.

  • db0
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    301 year ago

    There is no “data ownership”. It’s all made up. If you don’t want people to copy and build off your ideas, don’t share them. That’s not to defend corpos Btw. I posit that any ai models trained on public data must be open sourced by default.

      • What did the user agreement say? Also just out of curiosity do you remember all those privacy nuts back in the day who warned us all about the dangers of closed source software?

    • @nehal3m@sh.itjust.works
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      141 year ago

      Your heart rate. Your step count. Your location. Your searches. Your browser history. Your call history. Your contacts. Your transactions. Your credit history. Your medical history. This is data that you didn’t choose to create or share, but that you exhaust in the day-to-day things you do.

      Surveillance capitalism has grown too unfathomably huge and ingrained to choose not to share this data; that would be akin to checking out of modern life wholesale in a lot of ways. Guarding this data takes not only the realisation that it needs guarding, but changing law and culture such that the parties that have to have all that data to provide you with services cannot take it from you to sell.

      • db0
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        21 year ago

        There’s a difference between private data and content. Obviously this is not what we’re talking about here

    • @trafficnab@lemmy.ca
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      31 year ago

      AI is here and it’s here to stay whether we want it or not, either it’s free and legal for everyone to develop (ie training on copyrighted data does not violate copyrights), or only the massively rich corporations will be able to afford to pay for (or already happen to have the rights to as the case may be, see stock photo companies or reddit for examples) the sheer amounts of data that are needed to adequately train them

  • Ephera
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    261 year ago

    Yeah, I’m genuinely feeling like I don’t want to publish things I create onto the internet, because these companies will gladly break laws to use it. Companies spent decades building up ridiculous copyright laws and when they go to violate those laws themselves, law enforcement fails.

    • @Melvin_Ferd@lemmy.world
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      71 year ago

      Don’t. Please stop. Don’t publish anything you don’t want shared. There was so much cool free stuff that everyone shared until content creators showed up trying to sell us shit like a bunch of car salesmen. Please stop

      • Ephera
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        51 year ago

        Oh, I do want it shared. I just don’t want to be taken advantage of by immoral companies. That’s why I would share it under licenses like AGPLv3 or CC BY-NC-SA. In a sense, I’m very much blocking others from taking the free stuff I share and turning it into a commercial product, because I do feel the same as you.

        • @Hackworth@lemmy.world
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          -21 year ago

          A.I. will destroy copyright completely, and I’m here for it. Art and commerce have no business being bedfellows.

          • wanderingmagus
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            41 year ago

            But art, depending on your definition of art, has been sold for thousands of years. Even in Archaic Greece, potters were selling amphorae with intricately painted glazing on the side.

            • @Hackworth@lemmy.world
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              -11 year ago

              Oh, I think Art and Commerce should remain friends. And they’ll probably hook up every now and then, when Art has too much to drink. But they’ve been way too cozy lately.

    • @Ilovethebomb@lemm.ee
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      11 year ago

      Just create demented shitposts that will poison any AI, like the ones trained on Reddit posts telling users to put glue on their pizza and make chlorine gas.

  • @Viking_Hippie@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    We’re speeding towards a point where only the obscenely rich resource hoarders and their corporations actually own anything.

    The rest of us will just use anything, including what is still technically our own bodies, at their pleasure.

    Can’t say I’m quite gleeful about it tbh…

  • mechoman444
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    -111 year ago

    I don’t understand what the issue here is? Are people upset that companies that own the AI will churn profit from the free data available on the Internet for them to be trained on?

    If so, this is a hypocritical double standard. We use the Internet for the free information ourselves. We train ourselves but if a company does it for AI all of the sudden all that free information suddenly needs to be paid for because it’s an incorporated institution?

    Y’all need to figure out how free you want this content to be because there’s no in-between.

    • @grrgyle@slrpnk.net
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      11 year ago

      … but if a company does it for AI …

      That’s the line. Free for people. Not free for companies.

      • mechoman444
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        11 year ago

        Right but that’s the thing. You can’t have it both ways. Either the information is free or it isn’t.

        If it is offered for free who queries that information should be irrelevant.

          • mechoman444
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            01 year ago

            If the authors of the information wanted to get paid they wouldn’t submit their intellectual property to a website that provides said information for free.

            Like I said either everyone pays or no one does. You can’t have it both ways.

            • @grrgyle@slrpnk.net
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              11 year ago

              … either everyone pays or no one does.

              How about this. Either everyone pays, or no one does, or only some of them have to pay - depending on their use.

              This all-or-nothing is a false dichotomy. Like look at how much software is free for small scale users or educational or non-profit orgs.

              • mechoman444
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                21 year ago

                And how exactly would this work?

                Actually I’ll tell you how this is going to work. Sites like Wikipedia, GitHub, stack overflow, ext will have to force every one of their users to open a personal account and conduct constant verifications to make sure they’re not AI’s.

                From what I’ve seen on the internet people don’t like this.

                So again it can’t be both, either it’s all free or it’s all paid for. There is no in between.

                Look, I know what you want to happen here and I even agree with it on the surface. Cooperations need to pay their fair share and many of them don’t. But I don’t think you understand the implications of what you’re asking for.

                Let the AI’s learn for free because in a few years it won’t matter anyway.

                We’re on the precipice of a technological singularity and hopefully in our lifetimes the function of a monetary economy will no longer be relevant.

                • @grrgyle@slrpnk.net
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                  01 year ago

                  Licenses are binding because courts recognise them. For individual players it’s usually not worth pursuing, unless you’re Nintendo.

                  But for large, wealthy, or venture backed, enterprises (notably, ones with legal departments) a class action suit is much more feasible.

                  This is super basic. We can do better. This isn’t even like novel legal territory. We went through this with photography and Photoshopping.

    • ASeriesOfPoorChoices
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      01 year ago

      exactly. if a human painter looks at a bunch of posted images to practice with, it’s okay. If a computer does it, it’s evil.

      Both the human artist and the computer eventually create something someone wants to pay for, and neither paid for looking at other people’s art.

      it’s a double standard.