> "Probably" is doing a lot of heavy lifting in that sentence.
Indeed, that's why I used it. It wasn't long ago that DALLE-2 outputs were the ownership of OpenAI (they changed it so the owner is the user recently). Definitely plenty of room for debate on who the owner should be.
> As for "_learned_", that's pretty debatable considering it's reproducing recognizable trademark infringement.
I guess. I meant this strictly in the machine learning sense, where "learned" is typically used to describe models trained via stochastic gradient descent.
> I have no idea why anyone would assume the "move fast and break things" disruption mindset that pervades tech companies these days, especially in spaces like ML/"AI", would mean they considered the legality, ethics, or good business sense of their training dataset.
I agree mostly, except that companies like Alamy have their hooks in everywhere so they can seek rent. I just figured they might be cautious about this if e.g. Microsoft (OpenAI's business partner) had an existing agreement in place for Bing or something.
Indeed, that's why I used it. It wasn't long ago that DALLE-2 outputs were the ownership of OpenAI (they changed it so the owner is the user recently). Definitely plenty of room for debate on who the owner should be.
> As for "_learned_", that's pretty debatable considering it's reproducing recognizable trademark infringement.
I guess. I meant this strictly in the machine learning sense, where "learned" is typically used to describe models trained via stochastic gradient descent.
> I have no idea why anyone would assume the "move fast and break things" disruption mindset that pervades tech companies these days, especially in spaces like ML/"AI", would mean they considered the legality, ethics, or good business sense of their training dataset.
I agree mostly, except that companies like Alamy have their hooks in everywhere so they can seek rent. I just figured they might be cautious about this if e.g. Microsoft (OpenAI's business partner) had an existing agreement in place for Bing or something.