chaos

joined 2 years ago
[–] chaos@beehaw.org 5 points 1 day ago

Those images in the mirror are already perfect replicas of us, we need to be ready for when they figure out how to move on their own and get out from behind the glass or we'll really be screwed. If you give my """non-profit""" a trillion dollars we'll get right to work on the research into creating more capable mirror monsters so that we can control them instead.

[–] chaos@beehaw.org 16 points 4 days ago (4 children)

Fan art is generally protected because of a rule called "fair use", which allows people to use copyrighted work without permission. For example, if you briefly quote a book, the author won't have success if they go after you for copying from their book, even though you clearly did. Generally speaking, a person making fan art and not selling it is going to be protected under fair use. The law wants creators to have control of the thing they created, but we all live in a shared culture and we all deserve to participate in the art we experience, so there's some wiggle room, and this has been the case long before AI was a thing.

What these AI companies are doing, on the other hand... well, it hasn't really been tested in court yet, but they're doing a lot more than single images or brief quotes, and they're doing it for money, so they'll likely have some work to do.

[–] chaos@beehaw.org 1 points 5 days ago (1 children)

Ah, I didn't see that edit, apologies, had the page loaded for a while before replying.

Isn't that the same leverage that the earliest labor unions used because it was all they had? It seems to fit very well, actually. There's a smaller but more powerful group in charge of them, workers get little to no direct say in company policy or who they are managed by and have to hope they're listened to when asked how things are going. There certainly isn't a second C-suite waiting in the wings to be put into power if the first one disappoints, the current powers-that-be would be insane to allow something as chaotic as that. If the CEO's got a good track record of listening, the pay's pretty good and satisfaction is high, and they're kept in line with picket lines when it's necessary, is this company an extension of the working class like China's government is?

I'm comparing and contrasting quite a bit with my new job, which fits much more closely with what my idea of something worker-controlled would be. It's fully employee owned, so profits go either back into the business or into our pockets as bonuses. There's as little hierarchy as possible, the closest thing to a manager isn't ever going to "put" you on a project, you're free to find one that you like and wants you to join. Company decisions involve everyone equally, and there's freedom to loudly speak your mind about policies and procedures if you disagree with them. That's closer to the country I'd want to live in, not the one where my influence is akin to answering corporate surveys and getting to choose which of 3 approved managers I want to work under, or go on strike if I'm really not happy.

[–] chaos@beehaw.org 1 points 5 days ago (3 children)

Right, that's a good example of it going the way you describe, and I'm curious what would've happened if the government hadn't folded. If the people really are making the decisions, they would get their way eventually, what does that look like?

[–] chaos@beehaw.org -3 points 5 days ago (5 children)

But this doesn't answer my question, the only mechanism for people's input seems to be elections and polling, and it conspicuously omits the fact that elections only allow party-approved candidates. Maybe the powers-that-be have a great track record of listening and respecting the will of the people, and are beloved by all as a result, but that doesn't actually put the people in control, it just means the ones actually in control are being nice. When the government and the people have a fundamental disagreement about the path forward, what piece am I missing that makes the government the one to back down?

[–] chaos@beehaw.org -1 points 6 days ago (7 children)

I'm trying to get to how it's democratic and worker-controlled in your eyes because it's hard to see for me, as people don't seem to get to choose much in the system as designed. What's the mechanism for average people to change a government policy that they disagree with? If the party does start to lose touch with what the workers need or start working against their interests, how do the workers course-correct it?

[–] chaos@beehaw.org 2 points 6 days ago

Oh, c'mon.

The PRC is officially organized under what the CCP terms a "system of multi-party cooperation and political consultation under the leadership of the CCP," in which the minor parties must accept the leadership of the CCP.

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