this post was submitted on 08 Aug 2023
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There is a second way, legend has it. The ancient ones tell a tale of the one that does not use the service, and does not train someone else's shitty models for free.
I hate to break it to you, but we're all presently training someone else's shitty models for free by commenting on Lemmy. Probably multiple organizations at some point, in fact.
You didn't break it to me.
Yeah, when I write something public I accept that anyone can read it or use it for whatever reason. When I pay for a service then it's a bit of a grey area. When the service is free I know my data will be used to make money by any means necessary.
Thats why I make misatkes in everyting I write. They won't have a good set too take from my comments.
We should alll (w)right wrongs like this.
Rigging wrongs by writing wrong, loivcjfrrrjdd it!
You raise a very good point, people cannot be mad that companies use data that they made public to train their ai. It's public, people can do whatever they want with it. We really need to teach people to be more careful with what they post online.
But I'm wondering, is there a default license for data posted on lemmy?
That would imply ownership and agency over the retention of our data, which federation kind of fundamentally cannot guarantee. An instance in the Fediverse can only guarantee the right to be forgotten on their own instance. I could see this becoming a big regulatory problem as the Fediverse grows. We're already seeing regulatory issues with CSAM, for example.
The third way is like the second way: we learn to write good without crutches.
As a native American English speaker, shit's mad hard yo.
Native American English you say? You write-um heap good talk!
Please read turn to page 32 of your copy of Strunk & White and recite the prayer against avoiding excess verbiage.