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It is a rough experience juggling time, money, resources, and people, not everyone can do it let alone do it well or often and especially while enjoying the process. And that is, I reiterate, fine. And honestly, if you're really concerned about allowing people to create as much as they want, worry less about getting plagiarism engines to be commonplace and more about making it easier for people to eat and keep a roof over their heads. |
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Me and my cousin went to a short upskilling course today to learn how to brew coffee and become baristas.
Now I don't drink coffee (I still maintain that tea is the superior beverage), but after tasting cappucino for the first time in my life, I realised why people get hooked into this stuff. So anyways, they taught us how to brew lattes and espressos and different types of coffees. And well, free coffee is free coffee amirite? I ended up drinking what I thought was four shots of coffee out of paper cups. And then when I went home and my parents told me how much a shot of coffee actually was, I realised I actually drank the equivalent of eight shots. Welp. |
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In principle, I do not understand the desire to see the problem in AI, and not in the person who uses it. It is as pointless as blaming a car for an accident or a bat for a beating. AI is a tool. Advanced, but a tool. Not a person or even a living organism (although even aggressive dogs are the responsibility of their owners). So people should be punished for crimes committed with the help of AI. Plus, I wonder why the other side of the coin is ignored. AI can also be used to detect plagiarism. Improve the ?search by image? function a little and you?re done. Of course, this requires human supervision and verification, but still the process becomes much easier and faster. Although this creates the following problem. In the age of postmodernism, how many human-made works can withstand the emotionless machine test? Will it Star Wars pass? Matrix? Films of the same Tarantino? Power Rangers after all? But for many, these films are the foundation of media culture that has shaped their personality. The problem is that plagiarism is already widespread and widespread. They turned a blind eye to it for decades and AI looks like a very belated attempt to draw a line, at the same time throwing responsibility onto someone who cannot fight back. But it's not fair and it won't work. I sincerely believed that Luddism remained at the beginning of the last century, but apparently, learning from other people?s mistakes is too boring. Bans never work. They didn't work with witchcraft, alcohol, abortion. They won't work with AI either. They will simply transfer the AI to the criminal underground, which will only worsen the situation. But fines are a completely different matter. Simply because they will push to improve the AI and create a version that avoids plagiarism. Not out of good intentions, but to lead the market. Do I really have to explain how the business works? |
I post this without context so you can have the same reaction as I did when I unsuspectingly clicked on this :lol
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yplc0JLJZv4 |
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*clicks on video* Me: Wait a second... EDIT: Oh wait it's literally in the title lol. If you can read some Japanese you'd know what to expect. |
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