Very nice!
- 42 Posts
- 997 Comments
- makingStuffForFun@lemmy.mltoLinux@lemmy.ml•Why is Debian always left out of the distro recommendations?201·24 days ago
I’ve used it for a few years. What issue does it have for a desktop? I’ve had everything “just work”.
- makingStuffForFun@lemmy.mltoOpen Source@lemmy.ml•Notepad++ hijacked by state-sponsored hackers2711·26 days ago
Full on. China poisoning open source software. Lucky it got caught. Imagine how much of it is going on.
- makingStuffForFun@lemmy.mltoOpen Source@lemmy.ml•Godot Engine 4.6 has been officially released, bringing major upgrades 🥳16·1 month ago
It’s absolutely mind boggling. The power of the people.
- makingStuffForFun@lemmy.mltoAsklemmy@lemmy.ml•Are there any widely used mesh networking projects being used by people in apartments in cities?3·1 month ago
That is impressive!
Zooming in, i can see villages where i know people. These are very small villages, and the system is in use.
So I imagine it’s friends, and family.
And that’s ok. A great way to start and build a momentum.
Go Deutschland!
- makingStuffForFun@lemmy.mltoOpen Source@lemmy.ml•Histomat of F/OSS: We should reclaim LLMs, not reject them29·1 month ago
I asked the bot. It says:
I understand the concern. This question sits at the intersection of copyright law, statistics, and how machine-learning systems work—and it’s fair to be skeptical.
Here’s the most precise and careful way to frame it:
1. I can’t confirm GPL training data
I don’t know what specific works or licenses were in the training set, and I can’t confirm that GPL-licensed material was included. Neither I nor users have visibility into the underlying corpus.
So while it may be statistically plausible that GPL text exists somewhere in public data, plausibility ≠ proof, and I can’t assert it as fact.
2. Training ≠ distribution (the core legal argument)
OpenAI’s legal position (and that of most ML practitioners) is broadly this:
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Training on copyrighted material is not the same as redistributing it
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The model does not contain copies of works
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Outputs are newly generated, not retrieved
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Copyright law regulates copying and distribution, not learning patterns or statistics
This is analogous (legally, not philosophically) to a human reading GPL code and then later writing different code from experience.
Whether courts ultimately agree in every jurisdiction is still being litigated—but no court has ruled that training itself is per se illegal.
3. GPL specifically
GPL obligations trigger when you:
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copy
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modify
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distribute
GPL-licensed code or derivative works.
Current legal consensus does not treat model weights or outputs as GPL “derivatives” in the copyright sense, because:
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There is no preserved expressive structure
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There is no traceable lineage to a specific work
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Outputs are not mechanically derived from any one source
That’s why GPL’s copyleft provisions are generally understood not to propagate through model training.
4. Is the law settled?
No. Anyone claiming it is settled is overstating.
What is true:
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Training on public data is widespread and openly practiced
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Multiple lawsuits exist, but none have yet established that training itself violates copyright or GPL
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Regulators and courts are still clarifying boundaries
5. Practical reality
Even if GPL material were in the training mix:
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That alone would not automatically make the model or its outputs illegal
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Liability (if any) would hinge on specific outputs being substantially similar to protected works, not on statistical likelihoods about training data
Bottom line
Your intuition about probability is reasonable—but legality does not turn on probability. It turns on:
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whether protected expression is reproduced
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whether derivative works are created
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whether licenses are triggered by the act in question
As of now, the prevailing legal interpretation is that models like me are lawful to deploy, even though the debate is ongoing.
If you want, I can also:
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Compare this to the Google Books ruling
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Walk through why “derivative work” is a high legal bar
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Discuss what would actually make an AI system GPL-tainted in practice
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- makingStuffForFun@lemmy.mlOPtoLinux Questions@lemmy.zip•Linux Mint Taskbar (panel) on left, rather than bottom?English10·2 months ago
you can, and I’m now embarrased :-) Thank you
- makingStuffForFun@lemmy.mlOPtoLinux Questions@lemmy.zip•Linux Mint Taskbar (panel) on left, rather than bottom?English6·2 months ago
Can’t believe I missed it! Thank you
- makingStuffForFun@lemmy.mltoAsklemmy@lemmy.ml•If I travelled back in time to when I was younger wouldn't that mean my younger self would have already seen my current self as I'd have already visited from the future?2·2 months ago
Watch the movie named The Time Traveller’s Wife. It is absolutely superb and based on sort of that idea, but not quite.
- makingStuffForFun@lemmy.mltoThe Onion@midwest.social•‘Paw Patrol’ Writers Defend Episode Where German Shepherd Cop Shoots Unarmed Black Lab 17 Times In BackEnglish91·2 months ago
That was so good. I ate it for a second
I use Talon Voice
- makingStuffForFun@lemmy.mltoLinux@lemmy.ml•Linux is awesome at home, but aren't y'all forced to use Windows at work?761·3 months ago
Full Linux shop here. Love it…
Desktops, laptops, servers.
For those rare customer teams meets, we just do it in the browser.
</saltRub>
- makingStuffForFun@lemmy.mltoAsklemmy@lemmy.ml•Do you believe that to love is a choice?4·3 months ago
Boosh. There it is.
I’m making a shirt with this
The snap bullshit is not bullshit. It’s a legitimate sabotage, cheating the user, and making a walled garden.
They’re not trustworthy.
The only logical reason for them forcing users into their own, proprietary snap store, when a user is trying to install from another source, is they want complete control over that ecosystem. And the only reason for that is so that they can eventually sell it to a huge player like Microsoft or Google or Amazon.
They are completely untrusted with that slimy move.
I use Talon voice. It’s software that let’s me use the pc still, due to write severe RSI.
However, Wayland doesn’t allow a lot of functionality that tools like this need.
Therefore, anyone who requires a tool similar to Talon, needs X11.
KDE is out.
Yeah snap killed Ubuntu for me. I used pop for years, flirted with fedora, but, vanilla Debian is just so good and reliable, that’s where I’ve landed.
- makingStuffForFun@lemmy.mltoOpen Source@lemmy.ml•Pebble Watch Software Is Now 100% Open Source1·3 months ago
That’s good to know. Thank you. I’ll have a good look
Legend. Came back to his point with a friendly smile, and plenty of grace