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xc2215x , in A million more U.S. workers can now get overtime pay: 'Most employers absolutely do want to get this right'

Good for the workers. They deserve it.

Draegur , in Gunman who was killed by Yellowstone rangers had planned a July 4 mass shooting, park reveals

gunman
*DOMESTIC TERRORIST

Joelk111 ,

Yeah, that’s a strange use of words. I was like “oh, he just had a gun where he wasn’t supposed to,” but no, he was in the act of performing terrorism.

JohnDClay , in AOC Moves to Impeach Supreme Court Justices Thomas and Alito

Can supreme court justices be impeached? Has it been attempted before?

cupcakezealot ,
@cupcakezealot@lemmy.blahaj.zone avatar
Silentiea ,
@Silentiea@lemmy.blahaj.zone avatar

So… Yes

SuddenDownpour ,

It would be a pretty glaring oversight if someone at a position of power couldn’t get their misconducts condemned.

kaffiene ,

Like the President?

JohnDClay ,

Thanks!

aceshigh , in Treasury, IRS announce 'major milestone' of $1 billion in past-due taxes collected from millionaires
@aceshigh@lemmy.world avatar

… only $1b? That’s it? That number seems really low for millionaires.

cupcakezealot , in Trump's Project 2025 is now being searched in Google more than Taylor Swift and the NFL
@cupcakezealot@lemmy.blahaj.zone avatar

deleted_by_author

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  • Pilferjinx ,

    Trump looks good by comparison side by side. Why would the right want to change that?

    henfredemars , in 'We're screaming into the void.' Across the U.S., heat keeps breaking records

    Shareholders will be content to pay slightly higher prices to run the AC while the poors sizzle.

    shalafi , in A million more U.S. workers can now get overtime pay: 'Most employers absolutely do want to get this right'

    YES employers want to get this right. Worked IT for a payroll company for years and we did not fuck around with OT or any other sort of pay. If our clients tried to play around we’d put our foot in their ass and fire them if they kept trying.

    The reason wage theft exist is people not knowing their rights. Employers shit kittens if they get a call from the state labor board. In Florida the Board defaults to the employee’s claim unless the employer has solid evidence to refute it.

    Do NOT sign off on your hourly pay unless it’s accurate! By signing you agree that you worked those hours, no more, no less.

    tl;dr Workers have more rights than they know, employers are well aware.

    Cyth ,

    I’m sorry, but I think I disagree. I interpreted your point as “Employers care, you just have to hold them accountable”. I don’t think that is the attitude of companies who want to do things the right way. If workers have more rights than they know, and employers are aware of it, then I do not think that’s an mistake, that’s exploitation.

    shalafi ,

    Employers care because they know there are consequences. Employees don’t know they have rights.

    We had a slew of low-paying clients, often weaselly outfits like churches and restaurants. They still knew better than to play around.

    But again, they’re only paying what the employee signed off on.

    that’s exploitation

    Well, yeah? My point is, people, especially young people, don’t have the life knowledge to fight this shit. Hell, I was 47 when I learned all this. As bad as employee rights are in America, we’re not as powerless as we think.

    One example from Florida:

    You call the labor board and complain that you’re working 50-hours a week and only getting paid for 40. The board will ask your employer to show the signed time sheets. No sheets? 10-4. Employee gets everything they claimed. And the employer gets fined on top of that.

    Another:

    I got fucked around on overtime. Long story I won’t relate, but I had no idea I had government recourse. My god. A call to the state would have netted me thousands in back pay.

    FlyingSquid ,
    @FlyingSquid@lemmy.world avatar

    The reason wage theft exist is people not knowing their rights.

    Except that companies break the law when it comes to wage theft all the time and get away with it regardless. So no, that’s not the reason.

    shalafi ,

    If no one calls them on it, of course they get away with it. How many people you know understand that state labor boards even exist?

    FlyingSquid ,
    @FlyingSquid@lemmy.world avatar

    People do call them on it. They get away with it regardless. You’re living in a world where Boeing kills whistleblowers who reveal the obvious fact that their planes are so shitty they fall apart in mid-air and you think that the workers are to blame for wage theft.

    PenisWenisGenius , in Gunman at large after ambushing, killing deputy following assault on pizza worker over wrong order

    But food service workers don’t deserve human rights. I thought this was America. The radical left is clearly gaslighting this guy. Something Jesus something something communism /s (obviously)

    prole , in Trump claims not to know who is behind Project 2025. A CNN review found at least 140 people who worked for him are involved

    He doesn’t support it because it wasn’t “his idea”. He’ll do the exact same shit (or nearly exact. Probably some extra stupid bullshit in there and maybe a pinch less Christian nationalism if we’re lucky since he doesn’t give a shit about religion beyond using it to get him votes), but call it something different and say he came up with it. Either way, it’s the same outcome.

    TheFin , in Trump's Project 2025 is now being searched in Google more than Taylor Swift and the NFL

    He should grow a Hitler mustache

    cupcakezealot , in AOC Moves to Impeach Supreme Court Justices Thomas and Alito
    @cupcakezealot@lemmy.blahaj.zone avatar

    listen to her speech compared to, say, marjorie green, and how she approaches things passionately and logically with facts to back it up is night and day.

    it’s also a reminder of how marjorie greene is everything to the republicans that they tried to claim aoc would be to the democrats. instead, aoc has become one of the most passionate, analytical, and policy wonk driven politicians in congress.

    ImADifferentBird ,
    @ImADifferentBird@lemmy.blahaj.zone avatar

    I always thought it was hilarious how they’d complain that Democrats (especially coastal Democrats) are all “ivory tower elites”, and then mock her for working as a bartender and imply that made her unfit for office.

    Like, make up your mind, assholes.

    aStonedSanta ,

    Cognitive dissonance. The goal never was to be understood. Just to create chaos.

    intensely_human , in Trump's Project 2025 is now being searched in Google more than Taylor Swift and the NFL

    Calling it “Trump’s Project 2025” is misinformation given that Trump has publicly stated he has nothing to do with this thing.

    Irelephant ,
    @Irelephant@lemm.ee avatar

    He does have a lot to do with it, but he did not think of any of it.

    anon_8675309 ,

    This has to be sarcasm.

    The internet keeps a history.

    He Knows.

    Passerby6497 ,

    If you believe anything Trump says, you’re already lost. Trump should be assumed to be lying unless there’s at least 2 credible sources backing up what he says. Dude lies about as often as he draws breath.

    samus12345 ,
    @samus12345@lemmy.world avatar
    PugJesus , in Two 80-something journalists tried ChatGPT. Then, they sued to protect the 'written word'

    As a writer, it’s horribly disheartening.

    MagicShel ,

    As someone who uses AI all the time to write fiction just for my own entertainment, AI in no way replaces actual authors because while it might be technically capable, it’s garbage at big picture stuff. No theme or plot or foreshadowing that spans more than a handful of pages.

    AI cannot do the craft of writing no matter how good it is at prose.

    Not that there aren’t valid concerns and all, but I think this is a fading fad.

    PugJesus ,

    I hope you’re right.

    subignition ,
    @subignition@fedia.io avatar

    With ever-growing context windows, I have a feeling that it will only be a matter of time before it forces us to adapt. ChatGPT-4o is somewhat intimidating already, though I haven't used it as extensively as you have.

    But at the same time, I really would prefer to be wrong about that.

    MagicShel ,

    I’ve used it a fair bit. The extra context helps with things like getting facts straight, but it doesn’t help with coming back to themes or the things that really make a story hit, you know? Even with the extra context, I still find the stories get worse and worse as they get longer.

    I do think that a skilled author (better than me - I’m not awful but I’m no professional) could get a better output, but that doesn’t cut the author out of the loop there.

    FaceDeer ,
    @FaceDeer@fedia.io avatar

    That sort of thing can be handled by the framework outside of the AI's literal context window. I did some tinkering with some automated story-writing stuff a while back, just to get some experience with LLM APIs, and even working with an AI that had only a few thousand tokens' context I was able to get some pretty decent large-scale story structure. The key is to have the AI work in the same way that some human authors do; have them first generate an outline for the story, write up some character biographies, do revisions of those things, and only once a bunch of that stuff is done should it start writing actual prose.

    MagicShel ,

    I’m familiar with that. Not in quite that way because our app is for roleplaying where there isn’t a prewritten story but we use a database to pull relevant info into context. You can definitely help it, but you need author chops to do it well.

    Which means maybe this is a tool that could help good writers write faster, but it won’t make a poor writer into a good one. If for no reason other than you need to know how to steer and correct the output.

    kaosof ,

    These models can’t write satisfyingly/convincingly enough yet.

    But they will.

    MagicShel ,

    I’ve been using AI for about 5 years. I understand fairly well what they can and can’t do. I think you are wrong. I would bet money on it. They can’t reason or plan no matter how much context or training you give them because that’s not what they do at all. They predict the next word, that’s all.

    FaceDeer ,
    @FaceDeer@fedia.io avatar

    Have them predict what a reasonable plan would look like. Then they can start working from that.

    criitz ,

    I would bet against this. It’s not that hard to imagine machine learning being able to digest and reproduce plot-level architecture, and then handing the wording off to an LLM…

    MagicShel ,

    I mean AI can produce a plot, but the real craft of like, the heroes journey or having a theme that comes back again and again in subplots and things like that. Humor. Irony and satire. Pacing - OMG pacing. It’s just not very good at those things.

    If you want to write a Dick and Jane book with AI writing and art, yeah probably. But something like Asimov or Heinlein (or much less well known authors who nevertheless know their craft) I think an AI would never be able to speak to the human spirit that way.

    Even at the most low-brow level, I can generate AI porn, but it’s never as good as art created by humans.

    subignition ,
    @subignition@fedia.io avatar

    I wonder if the bigger concern isn't AI being able to imitate good writers, but rather it being able to imitate poor ones.

    Shiggles ,

    “AI” will probably get there someday, but I agree the tech is nowhere near there. Calling what we have now “intelligence” is a very strong stretch at best.

    Boozilla ,
    @Boozilla@lemmy.world avatar

    I mostly agree with you, but I don’t think it’s a fading fad. There was way too much AI hype, way too early. However, it gets gradually but noticeably better with each new release. It’s been a game changer for my coworkers and me at work.

    Our merciless greedy overlords will always choose software over human employees whenever they can. Software doesn’t sleep, take breaks, call out sick, etc. Right now it makes too many mistakes. That will change.

    MagicShel ,

    Fair enough. I’ve spent enough words making my point and anything else would be redundant. Time will tell. Probably within a couple of years - whenever venture capital gets antsy for actual results/profits instead of promising leads.

    FireTower ,
    @FireTower@lemmy.world avatar

    Not that there aren’t valid concerns and all, but I think this is a fading fad.

    https://lemmy.world/pictrs/image/9b508273-b72d-480c-8186-3eceab1c8ad7.jpeg

    I’m worried authors are 1920s horses. Sure those cars seem unreliable and impractical now. But we can’t see around the corner. The least they deserve is compensation for their works being used without proper license.

    kibiz0r ,

    My problem is less “someone might make a thing that arts better than real artists”

    It’s more “someone is absolutely committed to making that thing using the labor of the artists they intend to marginalize and not only is nobody is stopping them, tons are cheering”

    Dkarma ,

    Because it’s not stealing. No one is losing anything. In fact you should pay chatgpt for incorporting your work instead of just readting and discarding or forgetting it.

    kibiz0r ,

    Decades of draconian copyright law really scrambled our brains until we forgot there was anything other than copyright, eh?

    I’m not saying it’s stealing. I’ve been in favor of sampling, scraping, and pirating since the 90s. Culture is a global conversation. It’s perhaps the most important thing we’ve ever invented. And you have an innate right to participate, regardless of your ability to pay the tolls enacted by the chokepoint capitalists. I’m not against piracy, and I’m not in favor of expanding copyright law.

    I’m against letting market forces – those very same chokepoint capitalists – signal-jam that all-important conversation for their own profit. I’m in favor of enforcing already-existing antitrust law. Something we’ve conveniently forgotten how to do for the past 70 years.

    Charge them with anti-competitive business practices. Make them start over with artists who want to nurture their digital doppelgangers. That’s fine. Just don’t tell me the only option is “You must compete against an algorithmically-amplified version of yourself from now on, until you give up or you’re done perfecting it”.

    Yprum ,

    I just wanted to say, it’s refreshing to read a well argumented comment such as this one. It’s good to see every once in a while there are still some people thinking things through without falling for automatic hatred to either side of a discussion.

    kibiz0r ,

    You’re too kind. But I’ve only made it to this (still very incomplete) point by making lots of absolutely terrible arguments first, with plenty of failing-to-think-things-through and automatic hatred.

    Most importantly, I listen to a lot of people who either disagree with my initial takes or just have lots of experience with policy in this space.

    Cory Doctorow is always a great landmark for me, personally, because he embodies the pro-culture tech-forward pirate ethos while also stridently defending artists’ rights and dignity.

    Some great stuff from him includes:

    • How to think about scraping
    • What kind of bubble is AI?
    • Chokepoint Capitalism
    • Some of his crypto interviews, like I think his one for Life Itself was good even though the interviewer was pretty milquetoast
    • His appearances on Team Human (with Douglas Rushkoff) and just Team Human in general

    Ironically, this ancient video on the toxic history of copyright law – and warning against regulating similar technology going forward – makes some pretty good points against AI: www.youtube.com/watch?v=mhBpI13dxkI

    Also check out the actual history of the Luddites. Cool Zone Media has a lot of coverage of them.

    Also Philosophy Tube has a good one about transhumanism that has a section dismantling the “it’s just a tool” mindset you’ll see pretty often on Lemmy regarding AI.

    And CJTheX has a good transhumanism essay, too.

    Yprum ,

    I would love to hear your opinion on something I keep thinking about. There’s the whole idea that these LLMs are training on “available” data all over the internet, and then anyone can use the LLM and create something that could resemble the work of someone else. Then there’s the people calling it theft (in my opinion wrong from any possible angle of consideration) and those calling it fair use (I kinda lean more on this side). But then we have the side of compensation for authors and such, which would be great if some form for it would be found. Any one person can learn about the style of an author and imitate it without really copying the same piece of art. That person cannot be sued for stealing “style”, and it feels like the LLM is basically in the same area of creating content. And authors have never been compensated for someone imitating them.

    So… What would make the case of LLMs different? What are good points against it that don’t end up falling into the “stealing content” discussion? How to guarantee authors are compensated for their works? How can we guarantee that a company doesn’t order a book (or a reading with your voice in the case of voice actors, or pictures and drawings, …) and then reproduces the same content without you not having to pay you? How can we differentiate between a synthetic voice trained with thousand of voices but not the voice of person A but creates a voice similar to that of A against the case of a company “stealing” the voice of A directly? I feel there’s a lot of nuances here and don’t know what or how to cover all of it easily and most discussion I read are just “steal vs fair use” only.

    Can this only end properly with a full reform of copyright? It’s not like authors are nowadays very well protected either. Publishers basically take their creation to be used and abused without the author having any say in it (like in the case of spot if unpublished a artists relationship and payment agreements).

    kibiz0r ,

    So, I’ve drafted two replies to this so far and this is the third.

    I tried addressing your questions individually at first, but if I connect the dots, I think you’re really asking something like:

    Is there a comprehensive mental model for how to think about this stuff? One that allows us to have technical progress, and also take care of people who work hard to do cool stuff that we find valuable? And most importantly, can’t be twisted to be used against the very people it’s supposed to protect?

    I think the answer is either “no”, or maybe “yes – with an asterisk” depending on how you feel about the following argument…

    Comprehensive legal frameworks based on rules for proper behavior are fertile ground for big tech exploitation.

    As soon as you create objective guidelines for what constitutes employment vs. contracting, you get the gig economy with Uber and DoorDash reaping as many of the boss-side benefits of an employment relationship as possible while still keeping their tippy-toes just outside the border of legally crossing into IRS employee-misclassification territory.

    A preponderance of landlords directly messaging each other with proposed rent increases is obviously conspiracy to manipulate the market. If they all just happen to subscribe to RealPage’s algorithmic rent recommendation services and it somehow produces the same external effect, that should shield you from antitrust accusations – for a while at least – right?

    The DMCA provisions against tampering with DRM mechanisms was supposed to just discourage removing copyright protections. But instead it’s become a way to limit otherwise legitimate functionality, because to work around the artificial limitation would incidentally require violating the DMCA. And thus, subscriptions for heated seats are born.

    This is how you end up with copyright – a legal concept originally aimed at keeping publishers well-behaved – being used against consumers in the first place. When copyright was invented, you needed to invest some serious capital before the concept of “copying” as a daily activity even entered your mind. But computers make an endless amount of copies as a matter of their basic operation.

    So I don’t think that we can solve any of this (the new problems or the old ones) with a sweeping, rule-based mechanism, as much as my programmer brain wants to invent one.

    That’s the “no”.

    The “yes – with an asterisk” is that maybe we don’t need to use rules.

    Maybe we just establish ways in which harms may be perpetrated, and we rely on judges and juries to determine whether the conduct was harmful or not.

    Case law tends to come up with objective tests along the way, but crucially those decisions can be reviewed as the surrounding context evolves. You can’t build an exploitative business based on the exact wording of a previous court decision and say “but you said it was legal” when the standard is to not harm, not to obey a specific rule.

    So that’s basically my pitch.

    Don’t play the game of “steal vs. fair use”, cuz it’s a trap and you’re screwed with either answer.

    Don’t codify fair play, because the whole game that big tech is playing is “please define proper behavior so that I can use a fractal space-filling curve right up against that border and be as exploitative as possible while ensuring any rule change will deal collateral damage to stuff you care about”.

    Okay real quick, the specifics:

    How to guarantee authors are compensated for their works?

    Allow them serious weaponry, and don’t allow industry players to become juggernauts. Support labor rights wherever you can, and support ruthless antitrust enforcement.

    I don’t think data-dignity/data-dividend is the answer, cuz it’s playing right into that “rules are fertile ground for exploitation” dynamic. I’m in favor of UBI, but I don’t think it’s a complete answer, especially to this.

    Any one person can learn about the style of an author and imitate it without really copying the same piece of art. That person cannot be sued for stealing “style”, and it feels like the LLM is basically in the same area of creating content.

    First of all, it’s not. Anthropomorphizing large-scale statistical output is a dangerous thing. It is not “learning” the artist’s style any more than an MP3 encoder “learns” how to play a song by being able to reproduce it with sine waves.

    (For now, this is an objective fact: AIs are not “learning”, in any sense at all close to what people do. At some point, this may enter into the realm of the mind-body problem. As a neutral monist, I have a philosophical escape hatch when we get there. And I agree with Searle when it comes to the physicalists – maybe we should just pinch them to remind them they’re conscious.)

    But more importantly: laws are for people. They’re about what behavior we endorse as acceptable in a healthy society. If we had a bunch of physically-augmented cyborgs really committed to churning out duplicative work to the point where our culture basically ground to a halt, maybe we would review that assumption that people can’t be sued for stealing a style.

    More likely, we’d take it in stride as another step in the self-criticizing tradition of art history. In the end, those cyborgs could be doing anything at all with their time, and the fact that they chose to spend it duplicating art instead of something else at least adds something interesting to the cultural conversation, in kind of a Warhol way.

    Server processes are a little bit different, in that there’s not really a personal opportunity cost there. So even the cyborg analogy doesn’t quite match up.

    How can we differentiate between a synthetic voice trained with thousand of voices but not the voice of person A but creates a voice similar to that of A against the case of a company “stealing” the voice of A directly?

    Yeah, the Her/Scarlett Johansson situation? I don’t think there really is (or should be) a legal issue there, but it’s pretty gross to try to say-without-saying that this is her voice.

    Obviously, they were trying to be really coy about it in this case, without considering that their technology’s main selling point is that it fuzzes things to the point where you can’t tell if they’re lying about using her voice directly or not. I think that’s where they got more flak than if they were any other company doing the same thing.

    But skipping over that, supposing that their soundalike and the speech synthesis process were really convincing (they weren’t), would it be a problem that they tried to capitalize on Scarlett/Her without permission? At a basic level, I don’t think so. They’re allowed to play around with culture the same as anyone else, and it’s not like they were trying to undermine her ability to sell her voice going forward.

    Where it gets weird is if you’re able to have it read you erotic fan faction as Scarlett in a convincing version of her voice, or use it to try to convince her family that she’s been kidnapped. I think that gets into some privacy rights, which are totally different from economics, and that could probably be a whole nother essay.

    Yprum ,

    Well damn, thank you so much for the answer. That has gone well and beyond what I’d have called a great answer.

    First of all I just wanted to acknowledge the time you put into it, I just read it and in order to make a meaningful answer for discussion I probably need to read your comment a couple more times, and consider my own perspective on those topics, and also study a few drops of information you gave where sincerely you lost me :D (being a neutral monist, and about Searle and such, I need to study a bit that area). So, I want to give an adequate response to you as well and I’ll need some time for that, but before anything, thanks for the conversation, I didn’t want to wait to say that later on.

    Also, worth mentioning that you did hit the nail in the head when you summed up all my rambling into a coherent one question/topic. I keep debating myself about how I can support creators while also appreciating the usefulness of a tool such as LLMs that can help me create things myself that I couldn’t before. There has to be a balance somewhere there… (Fellow programmer brain here trying to solve things like if you are debugging software, no doubt the wrong perspective for such a complex context).

    UBI is definitely a goal to be achieved that could help in many ways, just like a huge reform of copyright would also be necessary to remove all the predators that are already abusing creators by taking their legal rights on the content created.

    The point you make of anthropomorphizing LLMs is absolutely a key point, in fact I avoid all I can mentioning AI because I believe it muddles the waters so much more than it should (but it’s a great way of selling the software). For me it goes the other way actually and I wonder how different we are from an LLM (oversimplifying much…) in the methods we apply to create something and where’s the line of being creative vs depending on previous things experienced and basing our creation in previous things.

    Anyway, that starts getting a bit too philosophical, which can be fun but less practical. Respecting your other comment, I do indeed follow Doctorow, it’s fascinating how much he writes, and how clear he can expose ideas. It’s tough to catch up with him at times with so much content. I also got his books in the last humble bundle, so happy to buy books without DRM… I’ll try to think a bit more these days on these topics and see what I can come up with. I don’t want to continue rambling like a madman without setting some order to my own thoughts first. Anyway, thanks for the interesting conversation.

    pkill ,

    Yes even for technical writing it’s absolute shit. I once stumbled upon a book about postgresql with repetitive summaries and generally a very algorithmic, article-like pattern on literally every page.

    iAmTheTot ,

    I’m a writer. My partner is an artist. Almost all of our friends are writers or artists, or both. The meteoric rise of AI off the theft of hard work has been so soul crushing for us, and the worst part is how few people seem to care.

    PugJesus ,

    My ‘favorite’ is the argument that replacing jobs is what technology is meant to do.

    This isn’t just a job. If I won the lotto tomorrow, if I had billions and billions of dollars and never had to make another cent in my life, I would still be writing. Art is not just a production, it is a form of communication, between artist and audience, even if you never see them.

    Writing has always been something like tossing a message in a bottle into a sea of bottles and hoping someone reads it. Even if the arguments that AI can never replace human writing in terms of quality is true, we’re still drowned out by the noise of it.

    It really revs up the ol’ doomer instinct in me.

    MagicShel ,

    The noise is a big problem for all of us, not just artists. The entire internet is getting flooded with just awful content.

    As I see it, the problem is the little piecemeal work that artists do to get by is going to disappear. AI can write clickbait stories and such because really once someone clicks it the quality of the article barely matters. I’m going to guess that isn’t the writing you have a passion for, but it might be the writing you or others do to put food on the table between writing your passion projects.

    That’s a completely legitimate concern to see that work going away. As much as I fucking hate that stuff, I’d rather a writer get paid to exercise their craft than to have it written by an AI. I don’t have a good answer for that. Those jobs might legitimately go away. They are low effort, short pieces of bullshit like AI excels at. As a programmer, many of the easy parts of my work are also disappearing leaving only the hard stuff.

    I don’t know. I don’t want AI to go away. It’s a useful tool for certain things, but it really complicates the journey from novice to master in several fields. I do know it won’t be able to meet the high hopes some folks have. Anyway, I’m trying to be upbeat without being dismissive of your concerns because they are completely valid. I wish you the best.

    floofloof ,

    Art is not just a production, it is a form of communication, between artist and audience, even if you never see them.

    Not just that: art is a way of enriching how we experience our being in the world, for both artist and audience. It expresses aspects of lived experience that are not obvious but run deep in making us what we are, and it helps us realize ways of understanding life that we cannot otherwise access. It’s communication not just between artist and audience but also between ourselves and our world. If we lump it all under the ugly category of “content” and hand its production over to machines, artists can no longer survive while practising their art, human insight suffers, and we are all impoverished.

    Dkarma ,

    My favorite argument is that it’s replacing artists. Now every trash artist has an excuse for why they’re a failure…oh chatgpt ruined me…

    circuitfarmer ,
    @circuitfarmer@lemmy.sdf.org avatar

    LLMs are the first thing in the space to get “good enough” to cause this. But they won’t be the last. Artists of all kinds across all media will be equally disheartened.

    AI (as it has been presented – not sentient, but these algorithmic approaches to generating content from existing patterns) is a great example of (some) STEM folks not understanding the social consequences of something before opening Pandora’s Box. It’s also a new way to steal.

    Dkarma ,

    What exactly do you think they’ve done? You should be proud. You accomplished your mission to put your work out on the internet for free to be consumed and now you’re upset because it’s being consumed by yet another program.

    You were fine with Google scanning a your works and people reading them for free. What do you think is so different in the case of gpt tools?

    BrokenGlepnir ,

    Chat gpt doesn’t site sources, after having butchered them of intent and meaning though.

    NocturnalMorning , in AOC files articles of impeachment against Supreme Court Justices Clarence Thomas and Samuel Alito

    I wish there was a way to get rid of corrupt judges at the highest level that wasn’t a political process. I never understood the lifetime appointments anyway. It hasn’t done anything to keep them from being partisan.

    Maggoty ,

    The American founders didn’t have good understanding of civil service type stuff back then. Coming from Britain there was a bureaucracy but if I’m remembering my history right it was mostly staffed by nobles who needed jobs and the overriding concern was that money should keep coming into the government. Especially from the colonies. This was actually part of the reason we ended up in a war for our independence. It may not have gone differently with a direct line, but we had to go through the undersecretary to the undersecretary to communicate with the British government. Which effectively made sure our concerns were never heard by the King until we petitioned him directly. Then he consulted his top advisor who also had not heard any concerns previously and they concluded the petition was worthless. To which we decided property destruction was the answer and cue the escalations.

    So what our founders wanted was an independent civil service, but they had no idea how to make one. They only knew about patronage systems. And the one lethal blow to any patronage system is to say you can hold this position for as long as you want, as long as you’re not corrupt. They knew it wasn’t perfect. And they openly said we should be holding Constitutional Conventions on the regular to improve on things like this. For the record the two competing models are to lean into partisanship and hold elections, or run the judiciary as a technocracy with limited sovereignty. So the judges would actually figure out the supreme court and lower courts themselves in that system. Much like our military does now.

    Both of those systems have their pros and cons but importantly, none of them stop determined ideological assaults on the institution. By the time you are hiring people it is too late to stop that. They’ve already been indoctrinated and they aren’t going to tell the truth about it publicly. (For example all the judges that overturned Roe v Wade, said it was settled law or something similar in their confirmation hearings. Then they flipped the literal second they had the majority on an abortion case.) You have to stop indoctrination at the source, in education. Which is why there’s such a huge push by conservative Christians to destroy public schools.

    Anyways that’s probably more than you wanted. TL;DR is it was the best system they had at the time, and they could not have foreseen fuckery like capping congress which obliterated the idea of actually representing the local views in a national body.

    deltapi ,

    There is. It’s illegal and it’s illegal to advocate for it, and it’s illegal to encourage someone else to do it. So I don’t wouldn’t do it, I don’t talk about it except in vague terms, and I don’t think you should do it either.

    sparkle ,

    but… the declaration of independence says we have a duty to do it! Surely the founding fathers would approve…

    Delusional ,

    Yeah here we have clearly obviously openly corrupt judges deciding on the biggest decisions of the land and nothing can seemingly be done to fix it. The system is broken.

    Deceptichum , in NYPD recruit dies during Bronx training exercise in sweltering heat
    @Deceptichum@quokk.au avatar
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