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Daniel McKimm's avatar

Our first mistake was to “trust” in the transference of our ‘public’ utility telecommunication networks critical connectivity, e.g. ownership of the outside plant physical INFRASTRUCTURE (telecommunications/broadband networks used as the on and off ramps accessing these CDNs, platforms and services - essentially most of today’s Internet and even critical public safety and national security traffic thereby deregulating most any means to a decentralized leveraging of discussion).

I propose we start this discussion using what critical thinking we have remaining in the return to the pre-1996 telecommunication deregulation act era where ownership of our outside plant telecommunication lines was a decentralized and still federated infrastructure as still exemplified and in practice with our highways, airways and waterways models. While not a solution in itself, it would afford us leverage in this process of determining choice or levels of AI vendor participation or non-participation in a more democratic manner, rather than the arbitrary, and often scandalous behavior that’s resulted since the 90’s. https://youtu.be/mGzDpY6ZTnk

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Joseph Hewitt's avatar

A relevant story here... the US Copyright Office denied a submission indicating the output from an AI product does not constitute "human authorship".... even if all the potential input data was from a human. 1) Can you profit from others' work on the input side? 2) Can you say the work is yours because you "designed" the prompts to the model? https://arstechnica.com/information-technology/2023/02/us-copyright-office-withdraws-copyright-for-ai-generated-comic-artwork/?utm_source=join1440&utm_medium=email&utm_placement=newsletter

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