Hot take
Yes, plus also sentiments echoed in "Humans".
Hot take
Interesting point. Which could well hinge on the definition of 'use'.
This seems to usually be tested in court by how similar the outputs are to other existing works, often siding with the rights holders of the existing works.
I don't think that people will accept the view that a machine could be as 'lossy' as a human.
Hot take
Should the developer of the algorithm be considered to have a right to the resultant work?
Should the rights holders of the training data set be considered to have a right to the resultant work?
Or should the 'artist' who combined them and generated the work?
I don't think there is an easy answer here.
But I do think it's too simplistic to say that the licences of the works used to train the AI model can be ignored, which seems to be Github's current stance.
Hot take
@deavid could the model the AI generated from the training data not be considered a derived work? And thus the output of the AI a derived work?
I also don't see an explicit grant in the GPL v2 or v3 for ' learning', what clause gives you this impression?
I genuinely think there will be some interesting test cases over AI and copyright. It won't be a short or pretty road.
@FranckPachot interesting. Seems like it could be a surprise for a lot of people in many usecases though. Surely at minimum you'd need to track the column dependency graph at minimum, which could be non-trivial. Is it really a speed up that people need given the other tradeoffs?
Almost 180k new users joined #mastodon yesterday, a new record. This third #twitterMigration wave happened after Musk's Twitter 2.0 ultimatum to #Twitter workers. Each wave is stronger than the previous one. Here is my updated plot showing the three consecutive waves.
@davidallengreen it's always amused me that the UK is the only Country Code Top Level Domain (CCTLD) which does not (actively) use it's ISO 2 letter country code.
Automattic is one of the most important companies on the Internet.
They make Tumblr, WooCommerce, Akismet, LongReads, WordPress—among others.
WordPress alone powers ~44% of the world's websites.
More interesting: despite being such a large, dominant company, few people hate Automattic.
Why is this? 🧵
@adamsweet Welcome to the party!
@bigcalm Gitlab CI has the concept of services which might be needed during a build, eg a test database: https://docs.gitlab.com/ee/ci/services/
@bigcalm Smart home protocols and standards are a total mess of walled gardens and interop issues.
Zigbee and ZWave devices are fairly well standardised and talk locally but you need adapters. It's also not uncommon for devices to require a manufactures hub to update.
For WiFi connected devices there are no widespread standards that I'm aware of and it's very much down to the manufacturer's design.
What we think improves productivity vs. what actually does.
It's often easy to feel like you’re only productive if you are working hard non-stop. That’s a misnomer. Breaks are vital for boosting productivity and deterring burnout. Make time to re-energize,
get rest and enjoy life in between.
Illustration by Liz Fosslien
This looks really interesting for encrypted volumes on Linux: https://shufflecake.net/
I keep hearing that #Mastodon is not likely to replace #Twitter. To that I say: so what?
I've been contributing to the #Linux desktop for the last 15 years not because it's likely to replace #Windows, but because providing people with free desktop is the right thing to do.
I use and support Mastodon not because it's likely to replace Twitter, but because it's a social network done right.
Decided to look at network stats again. There are 1M more people using #Mastodon today than there were on October 27.
Call for Papers for #FOSDEMPGDay 2023 (both FOSDEM Devroom + PGDay on Friday) is open. Submit your talks!
#PostgreSQL #Conference #FOSDEM #CfP
https://2023.fosdempgday.org/
PostgreSQL, Linux, Java, and more. Lover of computers, electronics and Open Source. European. Lib Dem. Lead Technical Strategist nexteam.co.uk