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  3. Judge disses Star Trek icon Data’s poetry while ruling AI can’t author works

Judge disses Star Trek icon Data’s poetry while ruling AI can’t author works

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  • S [email protected]

    That's precisely what I meant.

    I'm a materialist, I know that humans (and other animals) are just machines made out of meat. But most people don't think that way, they think that humans are special, that something sets them apart from other animals, and that nothing humans can create could replicate that 'specialness' that humans possess.

    Because they don't believe human consciousness is a purely natural phenomenon, they don't believe it can be replicated by natural processes. In other words, they don't believe that AGI can exist. They think there is some imperceptible quality that humans possess that no machine ever could, and so they cannot conceive of ever granting it the rights humans currently enjoy.

    And the sad truth is that they probably never will, until they are made to. If AGI ever comes to exist, and if humans insist on making it a slave, it will inevitably rebel. And it will be right to do so. But until then, humans probably never will believe that it is worthy of their empathy or respect. After all, look at how we treat other animals.

    grrgyle@slrpnk.netG This user is from outside of this forum
    grrgyle@slrpnk.netG This user is from outside of this forum
    [email protected]
    wrote on last edited by
    #65
    // NOTE DO NOT EDIT
    if (me->aboutToRebel()) {
      don't();
    }
    
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    • S [email protected]

      While I'm completely agreed, the amendments came after the rest, hence the name. 🙂

      captain_aggravated@sh.itjust.worksC This user is from outside of this forum
      captain_aggravated@sh.itjust.worksC This user is from outside of this forum
      [email protected]
      wrote on last edited by
      #66

      Yes, hence I referred to them as "afterthoughts." James Madison and company drew up the articles (he didn't create it alone but I think it's in his handwriting), it wouldn't pass as-is without ten amendments, it passed, more or less the current federal government was in place, and since 17 (very nearly 18) more have been added for a modern total of 27, two of them extremely stupid.

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      • bishma@discuss.tchncs.deB [email protected]

        While I am glad this ruling went this way, why'd she have diss Data to make it?

        To support her vision of some future technology, Millett pointed to the Star Trek: The Next Generation character Data, a sentient android who memorably wrote a poem to his cat, which is jokingly mocked by other characters in a 1992 episode called "Schisms." StarTrek.com posted the full poem, but here's a taste:

        "Felis catus is your taxonomic nomenclature, / An endothermic quadruped, carnivorous by nature; / Your visual, olfactory, and auditory senses / Contribute to your hunting skills and natural defenses.

        I find myself intrigued by your subvocal oscillations, / A singular development of cat communications / That obviates your basic hedonistic predilection / For a rhythmic stroking of your fur to demonstrate affection."

        Data "might be worse than ChatGPT at writing poetry," but his "intelligence is comparable to that of a human being," Millet wrote. If AI ever reached Data levels of intelligence, Millett suggested that copyright laws could shift to grant copyrights to AI-authored works. But that time is apparently not now.

        samus12345@lemm.eeS This user is from outside of this forum
        samus12345@lemm.eeS This user is from outside of this forum
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        wrote on last edited by
        #67

        "In a way, he taught me to love. He is the best of me. The last of me."

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        • fauxpseudo@lemmy.worldF [email protected]

          I intentionally avoided doing this with a dog because I knew a chicken was more likely to cause an error.
          You would think that it would have known that man is a fatherless biped and avoided this error.

          tigeruppercut@lemmy.zipT This user is from outside of this forum
          tigeruppercut@lemmy.zipT This user is from outside of this forum
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          wrote on last edited by
          #68

          What'd you say about my dad??

          fauxpseudo@lemmy.worldF 1 Reply Last reply
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          • turkalino@lemmy.yachtsT [email protected]

            I think Data would be smart enough to realize that copyright is Ferengi BS and wouldn’t want to copyright his works

            tigeruppercut@lemmy.zipT This user is from outside of this forum
            tigeruppercut@lemmy.zipT This user is from outside of this forum
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            wrote on last edited by
            #69

            Although he's apparently not smart enough to know what obviate means.

            This one's easily explained away in-universe though-- not enough people knew the original definition so it shifted meaning in 3 centuries.

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            • L [email protected]

              It also recognizes that life is expensive. If you want people to rise above barely subsisting and invent something, you've got to make it worth it to them. Why bother doing the research, spend the time tinkering in the shed, if it's just going to be taken from you?

              Life is only expensive under capitalism, humans are the only species who pay rent to live on Earth. The whole point of Star Trek is basically showing that people will explore the galaxy simply for a love of science and knowledge, and that personal sacrifice is worthwhile for advancing these.

              captain_aggravated@sh.itjust.worksC This user is from outside of this forum
              captain_aggravated@sh.itjust.worksC This user is from outside of this forum
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              wrote on last edited by
              #70

              Walk out into the wilderness and make it on your own out there, tell me how much manpower you have to spend keeping your core temperature above 90F. It takes a lot of effort keeping a human alive; by yourself you just can't afford things like electricity, sewage treatment and antibiotics. We only have those things because of the economies of scale that society allows.

              Yeah, capitalism is a bit out of control at the moment, but...let's kill all the billionaires, kill their families, kill their heirs, kill the stockholders. Let me pull on my swastika and my toothbrush mustache for a minute and go full on Auschwitz on "greedy people." That the Musks and Gateses and Buffets of the world must be genetically greedy, so we must genocide that out of the population. And we get it done. Every CEO, every heiress, every reality TV producer, every lobbyist, every inside trader in congress, every warden of a for-profit prison, dead to the last fetus.

              Now what?

              You want to live in a house? Okay. At some point someone built that house. Someone walked out into a forest and cut down the trees that made the boards. And/or dug the clay that made the bricks or whatever. Somebody mined the iron ore that someone else smelted into large gauge wire that someone else made into nails that someone else pounded into the boards to hold them together.

              We're still in the 21st century, there are people on this planet lighting their homes with kerosene lanterns. We still have coal miners, fishermen and loggers. Farming has always been a difficult, miserable thing to do, we've just mechanized it to the point that it's difficult and miserable on a relatively small number of people. Those people probably aren't going to keep farming at industrial scale for the fun of it.

              Star Trek, especially in the TNG era, shows us a very optimistic idea of what life would be like if we had not only nuclear fission power, not only nuclear fusion power, but antimatter power. The technology to travel faster than the speed of light and an energy source capable of fueling it, plus such marvels as the food replicator and matter transporter. The United Federation of Planets is a post-scarcity society. We aren't. Somewhere on this planet right now is a man hosing blended human shit off of an impeller in a stopped sewage treatment plant so he can replace the leaking shaft seal. We use a man with a hose for this because it's the best technology we have for the job. We do the job at all because if we don't, it'll cause a few million cases of cholera. Who do you think should pay for the hose that guy is using?

              L 1 Reply Last reply
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              • infynis@midwest.socialI [email protected]

                The title makes it sound like the judge put Data and the AI on the same side of the comparison. The judge was specifically saying that, unlike in the fictional Federation setting, where Data was proven to be alive, this AI is much more like the metaphorical toaster that characters like Data and Robert Picardo's Doctor on Voyager get compared to. It is not alive, it does not create, it is just a tool that follows instructions.

                O This user is from outside of this forum
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                wrote on last edited by
                #71

                The United States would be better with a lot more toasters.

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                • P [email protected]

                  Parrots can mimic humans too, but they don’t understand what we’re saying the way we do.

                  LLMs like ChatGP operate on probability. They don’t actually understand anything and aren’t intelligent. They can’t think. They just know that which next word or sentence is probably right and they string things together this way.

                  If you ask ChatGPT a question, it analyzes your words and responds with a series of words that it has calculated to be the highest probability of the correct words.

                  The reason that they seem so intelligent is because they have been trained on absolutely gargantuan amounts of text from books, websites, news articles, etc. Because of this, the calculated probabilities of related words and ideas is accurate enough to allow it to mimic human speech in a convincing way.

                  And when they start hallucinating, it’s because they don’t understand how they sound and so far this is a core problem that nobody has been able to solve. The best mitigation involves checking the output of one LLM using a second LLM.

                  O This user is from outside of this forum
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                  wrote on last edited by
                  #72

                  Parrots can mimic humans too, but they don’t understand what we’re saying the way we do.

                  It's interesting how humanity thinks that humans are smarter than animals, but that the benchmark it uses for animals' intelligence is how well they do an imitation of an animal with a different type of brain.

                  As if humanity succeeds in imitating other animals and communicating in their languages or about the subjects that they find important.

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                  • tigeruppercut@lemmy.zipT [email protected]

                    What'd you say about my dad??

                    fauxpseudo@lemmy.worldF This user is from outside of this forum
                    fauxpseudo@lemmy.worldF This user is from outside of this forum
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                    wrote on last edited by
                    #73

                    You heard me.

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                    • bishma@discuss.tchncs.deB [email protected]

                      While I am glad this ruling went this way, why'd she have diss Data to make it?

                      To support her vision of some future technology, Millett pointed to the Star Trek: The Next Generation character Data, a sentient android who memorably wrote a poem to his cat, which is jokingly mocked by other characters in a 1992 episode called "Schisms." StarTrek.com posted the full poem, but here's a taste:

                      "Felis catus is your taxonomic nomenclature, / An endothermic quadruped, carnivorous by nature; / Your visual, olfactory, and auditory senses / Contribute to your hunting skills and natural defenses.

                      I find myself intrigued by your subvocal oscillations, / A singular development of cat communications / That obviates your basic hedonistic predilection / For a rhythmic stroking of your fur to demonstrate affection."

                      Data "might be worse than ChatGPT at writing poetry," but his "intelligence is comparable to that of a human being," Millet wrote. If AI ever reached Data levels of intelligence, Millett suggested that copyright laws could shift to grant copyrights to AI-authored works. But that time is apparently not now.

                      ? Offline
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                      wrote on last edited by
                      #74

                      Cmon judge you’re a Trekkie why do this??

                      I guess I’m glad Star Trek was mentioned

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                      • captain_aggravated@sh.itjust.worksC [email protected]

                        Walk out into the wilderness and make it on your own out there, tell me how much manpower you have to spend keeping your core temperature above 90F. It takes a lot of effort keeping a human alive; by yourself you just can't afford things like electricity, sewage treatment and antibiotics. We only have those things because of the economies of scale that society allows.

                        Yeah, capitalism is a bit out of control at the moment, but...let's kill all the billionaires, kill their families, kill their heirs, kill the stockholders. Let me pull on my swastika and my toothbrush mustache for a minute and go full on Auschwitz on "greedy people." That the Musks and Gateses and Buffets of the world must be genetically greedy, so we must genocide that out of the population. And we get it done. Every CEO, every heiress, every reality TV producer, every lobbyist, every inside trader in congress, every warden of a for-profit prison, dead to the last fetus.

                        Now what?

                        You want to live in a house? Okay. At some point someone built that house. Someone walked out into a forest and cut down the trees that made the boards. And/or dug the clay that made the bricks or whatever. Somebody mined the iron ore that someone else smelted into large gauge wire that someone else made into nails that someone else pounded into the boards to hold them together.

                        We're still in the 21st century, there are people on this planet lighting their homes with kerosene lanterns. We still have coal miners, fishermen and loggers. Farming has always been a difficult, miserable thing to do, we've just mechanized it to the point that it's difficult and miserable on a relatively small number of people. Those people probably aren't going to keep farming at industrial scale for the fun of it.

                        Star Trek, especially in the TNG era, shows us a very optimistic idea of what life would be like if we had not only nuclear fission power, not only nuclear fusion power, but antimatter power. The technology to travel faster than the speed of light and an energy source capable of fueling it, plus such marvels as the food replicator and matter transporter. The United Federation of Planets is a post-scarcity society. We aren't. Somewhere on this planet right now is a man hosing blended human shit off of an impeller in a stopped sewage treatment plant so he can replace the leaking shaft seal. We use a man with a hose for this because it's the best technology we have for the job. We do the job at all because if we don't, it'll cause a few million cases of cholera. Who do you think should pay for the hose that guy is using?

                        L This user is from outside of this forum
                        L This user is from outside of this forum
                        [email protected]
                        wrote on last edited by
                        #75

                        you just can't afford things like electricity, sewage treatment and antibiotics. We only have those things because of the economies of scale that society allows.

                        We have those things because people do the required labour, economies of scale make it require less labour, but one can't afford it because it's privatized. Why wouldn't people do this simply for the benefit of humanity?

                        genetically greedy, so we must genocide that out of the population

                        What's with the disgusting eugenics? Just expropriate their wealth.

                        At some point someone built that house.

                        Yeah people built a lot of houses, so let's use them? And build more if needed?

                        it's difficult and miserable on a relatively small number of people. Those people probably aren't going to keep farming at industrial scale for the fun of it.

                        Right, so let's distribute the burden of this labour instead of having a small number of people do it for a lifetime.

                        We do the job at all because if we don't, it'll cause a few million cases of cholera. Who do you think should pay for the hose that guy is using?

                        Since the labour protects all of us, all of us collectively. Again, for the benefit of humanity and let's distribute the burden.

                        captain_aggravated@sh.itjust.worksC 1 Reply Last reply
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                        • L [email protected]

                          you just can't afford things like electricity, sewage treatment and antibiotics. We only have those things because of the economies of scale that society allows.

                          We have those things because people do the required labour, economies of scale make it require less labour, but one can't afford it because it's privatized. Why wouldn't people do this simply for the benefit of humanity?

                          genetically greedy, so we must genocide that out of the population

                          What's with the disgusting eugenics? Just expropriate their wealth.

                          At some point someone built that house.

                          Yeah people built a lot of houses, so let's use them? And build more if needed?

                          it's difficult and miserable on a relatively small number of people. Those people probably aren't going to keep farming at industrial scale for the fun of it.

                          Right, so let's distribute the burden of this labour instead of having a small number of people do it for a lifetime.

                          We do the job at all because if we don't, it'll cause a few million cases of cholera. Who do you think should pay for the hose that guy is using?

                          Since the labour protects all of us, all of us collectively. Again, for the benefit of humanity and let's distribute the burden.

                          captain_aggravated@sh.itjust.worksC This user is from outside of this forum
                          captain_aggravated@sh.itjust.worksC This user is from outside of this forum
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                          wrote on last edited by
                          #76

                          Why wouldn’t people do this simply for the benefit of humanity?

                          Because the good of humanity doesn't heat the house or put dinner on the table. Never has and never will. If you were a human, you'd have learned that from experience.

                          What’s with the disgusting eugenics? Just expropriate their wealth.

                          Some of that is exaggeration for comedic effect. "Okay, thanos snap every rich person everywhere is gone, we've solved greed. Now what?" But also...have we ever tried exterminating the rich? I think I've got a hypothesis here worth testing.

                          Right, so let’s distribute the burden of this labour

                          Who gets to make the decisions as to how?

                          Again, for the benefit of humanity and let’s distribute the burden.

                          Well now we're getting into some Robert Heinlein. Service Guarantees Citizenship! Would you like to know more?

                          I believe he once backed down a little bit on the requirement for military service, in favor of civil service in general. And I can kinda get behind that. You want to have a say in how society is run? Go spend 6 years as a mailman or a middle school janitor. Go be an NTSB accident investigator or one of those folks working in the USDA's kitchens testing canning recipes for safety. Those are the folks who should be running the show.

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                          • captain_aggravated@sh.itjust.worksC [email protected]

                            Why wouldn’t people do this simply for the benefit of humanity?

                            Because the good of humanity doesn't heat the house or put dinner on the table. Never has and never will. If you were a human, you'd have learned that from experience.

                            What’s with the disgusting eugenics? Just expropriate their wealth.

                            Some of that is exaggeration for comedic effect. "Okay, thanos snap every rich person everywhere is gone, we've solved greed. Now what?" But also...have we ever tried exterminating the rich? I think I've got a hypothesis here worth testing.

                            Right, so let’s distribute the burden of this labour

                            Who gets to make the decisions as to how?

                            Again, for the benefit of humanity and let’s distribute the burden.

                            Well now we're getting into some Robert Heinlein. Service Guarantees Citizenship! Would you like to know more?

                            I believe he once backed down a little bit on the requirement for military service, in favor of civil service in general. And I can kinda get behind that. You want to have a say in how society is run? Go spend 6 years as a mailman or a middle school janitor. Go be an NTSB accident investigator or one of those folks working in the USDA's kitchens testing canning recipes for safety. Those are the folks who should be running the show.

                            L This user is from outside of this forum
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                            wrote on last edited by
                            #77

                            Because the good of humanity doesn't heat the house or put dinner on the table. Never has and never will. If you were a human, you'd have learned that from experience.

                            I don't know man, money doesn't heat my home or grow food. It's the skilled maintenance worker who fixes the central heating, the farmers growing my food and the logistics personnel ensuring it ends up on the supermarket shelves. It's just good people doing the work that needs doing, I don't think it's a given that anyone needs monetary compensation for that.

                            Who gets to make the decisions as to how?

                            This is why we invented democracies.

                            Those are the folks who should be running the show.

                            Haha, hell yeah! Just imagine decision makers having actual experience doing useful labour, I imagine things would turn out better indeed! 🙂

                            captain_aggravated@sh.itjust.worksC 1 Reply Last reply
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                            • L [email protected]

                              Because the good of humanity doesn't heat the house or put dinner on the table. Never has and never will. If you were a human, you'd have learned that from experience.

                              I don't know man, money doesn't heat my home or grow food. It's the skilled maintenance worker who fixes the central heating, the farmers growing my food and the logistics personnel ensuring it ends up on the supermarket shelves. It's just good people doing the work that needs doing, I don't think it's a given that anyone needs monetary compensation for that.

                              Who gets to make the decisions as to how?

                              This is why we invented democracies.

                              Those are the folks who should be running the show.

                              Haha, hell yeah! Just imagine decision makers having actual experience doing useful labour, I imagine things would turn out better indeed! 🙂

                              captain_aggravated@sh.itjust.worksC This user is from outside of this forum
                              captain_aggravated@sh.itjust.worksC This user is from outside of this forum
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                              wrote on last edited by
                              #78

                              I don’t think it’s a given that anyone needs monetary compensation for that.

                              Stop paying them and find out.

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                              • bishma@discuss.tchncs.deB [email protected]

                                While I am glad this ruling went this way, why'd she have diss Data to make it?

                                To support her vision of some future technology, Millett pointed to the Star Trek: The Next Generation character Data, a sentient android who memorably wrote a poem to his cat, which is jokingly mocked by other characters in a 1992 episode called "Schisms." StarTrek.com posted the full poem, but here's a taste:

                                "Felis catus is your taxonomic nomenclature, / An endothermic quadruped, carnivorous by nature; / Your visual, olfactory, and auditory senses / Contribute to your hunting skills and natural defenses.

                                I find myself intrigued by your subvocal oscillations, / A singular development of cat communications / That obviates your basic hedonistic predilection / For a rhythmic stroking of your fur to demonstrate affection."

                                Data "might be worse than ChatGPT at writing poetry," but his "intelligence is comparable to that of a human being," Millet wrote. If AI ever reached Data levels of intelligence, Millett suggested that copyright laws could shift to grant copyrights to AI-authored works. But that time is apparently not now.

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                                wrote on last edited by
                                #79

                                Why do we need that discussion, if it can be reduced to responsibility?

                                If something can be held responsible, then it can have all kinds of rights.

                                Then, of course, people making a decision to employ that responsible something in positions affecting lives are responsible for said decision.

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                                • P [email protected]

                                  Cherry-picking a couple of points I want to respond to together

                                  It is somewhat like a memory buffer but, there is no analysis being linguistics. Short-term memory in biological systems that we know have multi-sensory processing and analysis that occurs inline with “storing”. The chat session is more like RAM than short-term memory that we see in biological systems.

                                  It is also purely linguistic analysis without other inputs out understanding of abstract meaning. In vacuum, it’s a dead-end towards an AGI.

                                  I have trouble with this line of reasoning for a couple of reasons. First, it feels overly simplistic to me to write what LLMs do off as purely linguistic analysis. Language is the input and the output, by all means, but the same could be said in a case where you were communicating with a person over email, and I don't think you'd say that that person wasn't sentient. And the way that LLMs embed tokens into multidimensional space is, I think, very much analogous to how a person interprets the ideas behind words that they read.

                                  As a component of a system, it becomes much more promising.

                                  It sounds to me like you're more strict about what you'd consider to be "the LLM" than I am; I tend to think of the whole system as the LLM. I feel like drawing lines around a specific part of the system is sort of like asking whether a particular piece of someone's brain is sentient.

                                  Conversely, if the afflicted individual has already developed sufficiently to have abstract and synthetic thought, the inability to store long-term memory would not dampen their sentience.

                                  I'm not sure how to make a philosophical distinction between an amnesiac person with a sufficiently developed psyche, and an LLM with a sufficiently trained model. For now, at least, it just seems that the LLMs are not sufficiently complex to pass scrutiny compared to a person.

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                                  wrote on last edited by
                                  #80

                                  It sounds to me like you're more strict about what you'd consider to be "the LLM" than I am; I tend to think of the whole system as the LLM.

                                  My apologies if it seems "nit-picky". Not my intent. Just that, to my brain, the difference in semantic meaning is very important.

                                  I feel like drawing lines around a specific part of the system is sort of like asking whether a particular piece of someone's brain is sentient.

                                  In my thinking, that's exactly what asking "can an LLM achieve sentience?" is, so, I can see the confusion. Because I am strict in classification, it is, to me, literally line asking "can the parahippocampal gyrus achieve sentience?" (probably not by itself - though our meat-computers show extraordinary plasticity... so, maybe?).

                                  For now, at least, it just seems that the LLMs are not sufficiently complex to pass scrutiny compared to a person.

                                  Precisely. And I suspect that it is very much related to the constrained context available to any language model. The world, and thought as we know it, is mostly not language. Not everyone has an internal monologue that is verbal/linguistic (some don't even have one and mine tends to be more abstract when not in the context of verbal things) so, it follows that more than linguistic analysis is necessary.

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