Mike Powell wrote to All <=-
'The time has come to reclaim what was stolen from us': Bernie Sanders wants the American public to own 50% stake in AI companies
Under the scheme, the public could be granted a direct ownership stake
in America's biggest AI firms, as the proposal would impose a one-time tax, paid in company stock and not cash, on major AI firms like OpenAI, Anthropic and xAI. Because Sanders argues that AI has been built on society's collective knowledge, culture and research, he believes the economic gains should be shared broadly rather than concentrated among just a few leaders.
'The time has come to reclaim what was stolen from us': Bernie Sanders wants the American public to own 50% stake in AI companies
One of the biggest side-effects of web 2.0 was the devaluation and
commoditization of creative works. Start a social network, invite
people to post on it, and monetize their works without compensation.
Social networks made billions, the people who created the content get
nothing.
AI companies seem unrelenting in training their models on any content
they can get their hands on, restricted or otherwise. I wonder when
we'll hear that enterprise content is being sanitized and used to train
their models? Do we trust Microsoft or Anthropic when they claim limits
on enterprise model training?
Jaron Lanier has some interesting ideas about creative works and the
internet. He imagined an internet with micropayments and a world where
creative works weren't free but reflected that there was a person
creating them. Imagine if you could like a song on YouTube and send the
artist a micropayment directly?
Mike Powell wrote to KURT WEISKE <=-
AI companies seem unrelenting in training their models on any content
they can get their hands on, restricted or otherwise. I wonder when
we'll hear that enterprise content is being sanitized and used to train
their models? Do we trust Microsoft or Anthropic when they claim limits
on enterprise model training?
Define "enterprise content." I am thinking that some of the AI models have already been accused of, or actually caught, doing this?
Jaron Lanier has some interesting ideas about creative works and the
internet. He imagined an internet with micropayments and a world where
creative works weren't free but reflected that there was a person
creating them. Imagine if you could like a song on YouTube and send the
artist a micropayment directly?
That would be nice, and would maybe be a way to get around
demonitization when a platform stops showing ads (and sharing revenue) with a creator.
Define "enterprise content." I am thinking that some of the
AI models have already been accused of, or actually caught,
doing this?
My company uses Microsoft 365 and their enterprise copilot
offering. They claim that while it has access to company data in
your tenant, it does not use that data to train public models -
only for internal use in the company.
Mike Powell wrote to KURT WEISKE <=-
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