• Fake4000@lemmy.worldOP
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    10 months ago

    Shit move from Reddit. Glad I jumped ship to lemmy.

    Honestly, lemmy has less users compared to Reddit, yet you still get more engagement.

    • DarkNightoftheSoul@mander.xyz
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      10 months ago

      The only engagement you actually get is on super-niche subreddits. Other than that, the “engagement” you get on reddit is largely indistinguishable from bot traffic.

    • EatATaco@lemm.ee
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      10 months ago

      You are glad that you jumped to where AI companies can get the information for free, but are mad at Reddit for getting paid for it.

      I can’t make any sense of this.

      • TORFdot0@lemmy.world
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        10 months ago

        The difference is that Lemmy admins across the fediverse aren’t making the user experience worse so they can sell the data to corporations for LLM training

        • EatATaco@lemm.ee
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          10 months ago

          So it’s really that the user experience is getting worse. Feeding ai has nothing to do with it.

          • tacofox@lemm.ee
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            10 months ago

            First of all, tacos are friends, not food…

            Secondly, I think it’s more important what they did to achieve this goal, locking down the API behind a paywall was their way of creating value in their data. They knew then that it would be too expensive for independent developers to pay for but didn’t care. They knew the money would be coming AI data brokers.

          • Alex@feddit.ro
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            10 months ago

            I’d rather have AI companies have my data for free than reddshit gettong paid for it

      • grue@lemmy.world
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        10 months ago

        It’s like the difference between volunteering and being forced to do community service.

        • EatATaco@lemm.ee
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          10 months ago

          In neither case are you forced to do anything so this doesn’t make any sense either.

  • Boozilla@lemmy.world
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    10 months ago

    I don’t miss the dipshits, pun spammers, and smug power mods of reddit at all. I do miss their niche subs and smarter users. Like it or not, they do have some brainy folks peppered among the shit posters.

    We have some good folks here, too. Just need more of them.

    It’s a shame reddit has been dialing up the shit faucet slowly enough that most of their users don’t notice how awful it is now. They’ve grown accustomed to the poor quality of the content and weaponized greed of the owners.

    • Fake4000@lemmy.worldOP
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      10 months ago

      In all honesty, when I joined Reddit right after digg went to shit. It was amazing. Reddit was great, 3rd party apps were welcome, their interface was straightforward, and they had none of those NFT gold shit.

      It just went downhill.

      • NotSteve_@lemmy.ca
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        10 months ago

        At that point, they were also open source which was super cool. I always wanted that profile badge you got for submitting a merged PR.

        Reddit really went downhill fast after ~2015. I think Lemmy will get there eventually. I remember reddit being a lot smaller back then as well. It took a while to get to the point where niche communities could thrive and I do believe we’ll see that happen here as well (even if it takes a decade or so)

      • OmanMkII@aussie.zone
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        10 months ago

        I joined maybe 6 years ago, and there was a bit of shit talking and most posts had a troll answer hitting the most votes for some reason, but it was usually pretty good to scroll straight past and find some really insightful comments. There was a lot of good stuff around reddit, but slowly the absurb number of awards, NFT avatars, reposts, and ads every third post started to corrupt it. It was simple enough to switch to a third party app for quite a while, but the garbage slowly took over.

        Even if they hadn’t pulled 3rd party apps, it was getting pretty close a point where it wasn’t worth scrolling past the bullshit.

    • deweydecibel@lemmy.world
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      10 months ago

      smug power mods of reddit at all.

      Oh they’re here too. They’re not causing too much drama because there’s not enough going on, but they’re here. Some of them are admins of certain instances.

      The ones that aren’t here yet will eventually find their way here when Lemmy continues to grow. And the most concerning thing about that is how many more tools Lemmy is providing them to fuck with users.

      At least on Reddit, mods couldn’t see votes. Lemmy actually just made it easier for them.

    • Ragnarok314159@sopuli.xyz
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      10 months ago

      I left Reddit. Had over 600k Karma after a few years answering all kinds of questions from Veteran help to complex engineering.

      Fuck Reddit. Will never go back. It’s a shell of what it was only a few years ago.

      • Boozilla@lemmy.world
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        10 months ago

        I wonder how much of it is just bots and karma farmers pretending to talk to each other. It’s really awful.

  • pixxelkick@lemmy.world
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    10 months ago
    1. Called this awhile back, this is why Reddit has such a high evaluation.

    2. Poisoning your data won’t do anything but give them more data, do you seriously think reddit servers don’t track every edit you make to posts? You’d literally just be providing training data of original human vs poisoned. They’d still have your original post, and they have a copy of everytime you edit it.

    3. Whoever buys reddit will have sole access to one of the larger (I don’t think largest though) pools of text training Data on the internet, with full licensed usage of it. I expect someone like Google, FB, MS, OpenAI, etc would pay big $$$ for that.

    “But can’t people already scrape it?”

    1. Well yes, but it’s at best legally dubious in some places

    2. Scraping Data off reddit only gets you current versions of posts (which means you can get poisoned dara, and cant see deleted content), and is extremely slow… if you own the server you have first class access to all posts in a database, including g the originals and diffs of everytime soneone edited a post, and all the deleted posts too.

    Think about if you perhaps wanted to train an AI to detect posts that require flagging for moderation, if you scrape reddit data, you can’t find deleted posts that got moderated…

    But, if you have the raw original data, you 100% would have a list of every post that got deleted by mods and even the mod message on why it was deleted

    You surely can see the value of such data, that only owners of reddit are currently privy to atm…

    • Buddahriffic@lemmy.world
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      10 months ago

      They’ve also got vote counts and breakdowns of who is making those votes. This data will be worth more for AI training than any similar volume of data other than maybe the contents of Wikipedia. Assuming they didn’t have it set up to delete the vote breakdowns when they archived threads.

      Why are those breakdowns worth so much? Because they can be used to build profiles on each voter (including those who only had lurker accounts to vote with), so they can build AIs that know how to speak with the MAGA cult, Republicans who aren’t MAGA, liberals, moderates, centrists, socialists, communists, anarchists. Not only that, they’ll be able to look at how sentiments about various things changed over time with each of these groups, watch people move from one to another as their opinions evolved, see how someone pretends to be a member of whatever group (assuming they voted honestly and posted under their fake persona).

      Oh and also, all of that data is available through the fediverse but it’s free to train on to anyone who sets up a server. Which makes me question whether the fediverse is a good thing because even changing federation to opt-in instead of opt-out just covers whether your server accepts data from another. It’s always shared.

      Open and private are on opposite sides of a spectrum. You can’t have both, best you can do is settle for something in the middle.

      • pixxelkick@lemmy.world
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        10 months ago

        Which makes me question whether the fediverse is a good thing

        I’d argue it’s good, because it means open source AI has a fighting chance with FOSS data to train on without needing to fork over a morbillion dollars to Reddits owners.

        Whatever use cases the reddit data can train on, FOSS researchers can repeat it on Lemmy data and release free models that average joes can use on their own without having to subscribe to shit like Microsoft Copilot and friends to stay relevant.

      • Breezy@lemmy.world
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        10 months ago

        What if reddit also kept all deleted comments and post, im sure there are shit loads of things people type out just to delete, thinking all the while it’ll never see the light of day.

        • Buddahriffic@lemmy.world
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          10 months ago

          I’d be surprised if they don’t keep all of that. There were a number of sites for looking at deleted posts. They’d just go and grab everything and compare what was still there with what wasn’t and highlight the stuff that wasn’t there anymore.

          Which is also possible here, though the mod log reduces the need for it. But if someone is looking for posts people change their mind about wanting anyone to see, deleting it highlights it instead of hides it for anyone who is watching for that.

          • Breezy@lemmy.world
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            10 months ago

            I think that site was unddit, but yes those were posted then later deleted. Im talking about just typing out a post or comment and never posting just simply backing out of the page or hitting cancel. Im not just if any of that is stored on the site or just locally.

            • sacredfire@programming.dev
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              10 months ago

              You would be able to tell by monitoring the network tab of the browser developer tools. If post requests are being made (which they probably are, though I’m too lazy to go check) while you are typing a comment, they are most likely saving work in progress records for comments.

            • Buddahriffic@lemmy.world
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              10 months ago

              Oh, yeah, I’ve wondered the same myself. Hell, that might have been a motivation for removing the API access.

        • pixxelkick@lemmy.world
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          10 months ago

          They definitely do, it’s common for such systems to never actually delete anything because storage is cheap. It likely just is flagged deleted=true and the searches just return WHERE [post].Deleted = False on queries on the backend.

          So it looks deleted to the consumer, but it’s all saved and squirreled away on the backend.

          It’s good to keep all this shit for both legal reasons (if someone posts illegal stuff then deletes it, you still can give it to the feds), as well as auditing (mods can’t just delete stuff to cover it up, the original still exists and admins can see it)

          • archomrade [he/him]@midwest.social
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            10 months ago

            This is how system storage works generally: the disk “de-lists” the data in the block registry, so it appears there is no data in that block.

            Obviously a server back end it keeping it for redundancy and not efficiency, but procedurally it’s the same

      • archomrade [he/him]@midwest.social
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        10 months ago

        The problem (for most) was never that people’s public posts/comments were being used for AI training, it was that someone else was claiming ownership over them and being paid for access, and the resulting AI was privately owned. The fediverse was always about avoiding the pitfalls of private ownership, not privacy.

        It’s exhausting constantly being “that guy,” but it really needs to be said constantly; private ownership is at the core of nearly every major issue in the 21st century.

        The same goes for piracy and copyright. The same goes for DMCA circumvention and format shifting content you own. The same goes for proprietary tech ecosystems and walled gardens. Private ownership is at the core of the most contentious practices in the 21st century, and if we don’t address it shit like this will just keep happening.

    • Dettweiler@lemm.ee
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      10 months ago

      In regards to the editing part, sure, I’m sure they can track your edit history. However, on a large scale, most edits are going to be to correct things. To determine if an edit was to poison the text, it would likely require manual review and flagging. There’s no way they’re going to sift through all of the edits on individual accounts to determine this, so it’s still worthwhile to do.

      • T156@lemmy.world
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        10 months ago

        Although they could sidestep the issue a bit by simply comparing the changes between edits. Huge changes could just be discarded, while minor ones are fine.

        • bbkpr@lemmy.world
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          10 months ago

          You could easily make a minor change that negates every single other fact.

    • Milk_Sheikh@lemm.ee
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      10 months ago

      sigh

      So the old trick of “search term +reddit” no longer will work then huh?

      I’ve already made a habit of adding date limiters to web results from before before LLMs were made public… The SEO ‘optimization’ game of before was bearable, but the LLM spam just ruins so many search results with regurgitated garbage or teaspoon deep information

      • Nelots@lemm.ee
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        10 months ago

        search term +reddit

        tossing site:reddit.com before any search will guarantee all results come from reddit, if that’s what you’re looking for.

      • Dettweiler@lemm.ee
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        10 months ago

        During the peak of the great purge, it was quickly becoming pointless. A lot of results were bringing up deleted posts. It took a while for search engines to catch up and start filtering a lot of those results out.

    • afraid_of_zombies@lemmy.world
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      10 months ago

      Sounds like something a bunch of governments would be interested in. As you pointed out you get to see why human mods made certain decisions. Could you an edge in manipulation.

      • SpaceCowboy@lemmy.ca
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        10 months ago

        Ehh… I think manipulating people on the internet is so easy they don’t need to dig down to that level.

        Though for security reasons things like “we should blow up the government” that the person later deleted probably are tracked.

    • Falcon@lemmy.world
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      10 months ago

      With respect to 2, it would stop others scrapping the content to train more open models on. This would essentially give Reddit exclusive access to the training data.

      • deweydecibel@lemmy.world
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        10 months ago

        And ya know what? Frankly, if AI is going to harvest all this shit, I’d rather fuckers like spez couldn’t get rich off it in the process. Granted I’m not happy the tech bros running these AI companies are getting rich with these fucking things, but I can at least take solace that, for Lemmy at least, there isn’t some asshole middle man making bank off the work and words of users they never paid a dime to.

        Genuinely, why does Sepz and Reddit deserve to make money off anything we posted? Why does any social media site? They make the site, pay for the servers, maintain the apps, sure, and they can get compensation for that, I don’t see a problem there. But why does any social media company deserve to get rich when the only thing that makes their platform valuable is the people that post to it? Reddit didn’t even have paid mods, the community did all the work on the content of that site, why in the fuck do we tolerate these assholes making profit off it like this?

        • General_Effort@lemmy.world
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          10 months ago

          This is sad to read because I agree with all of it (except the casual sexism).

          why in the fuck do we tolerate these assholes making profit off it like this?

          Look at this thread. People delete their posts on Reddit. Which means that they can no longer be scraped for free. Which means they are now exclusively available in Reddit’s archive. It’s not that people tolerate it. It’s that the first instinct of people who don’t tolerate it, is to make it worse. What can you do?

        • 👍Maximum Derek👍@discuss.tchncs.de
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          10 months ago

          If the EU (or any other governments) decide that AI can’t legally train their models on information they don’t own or license (I don’t know how that would work legally but they talk about it), then this company that Reddit has sold access to could argue to lawmakers that they have license for all the content on Reddit. I don’t know that it would hold up, but I suspect it’s part of the company’s perceived value in this Reddit deal.

    • OmanMkII@aussie.zone
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      10 months ago

      I was curious if a robots.txt equivalent exists for AI training data, and there was some solid points here:

      If I go to your writing, I read it & learn from it. Your writing influences my future writing. We’ve been okay with this as long as it’s not a blatant forgery.

      If a computer goes to your writing, it reads it & learns from it. Your writing influences its future writing. It seems we are not okay with this, even if it isn’t blatant forgery.

      [AI at the moment is] different because the company is re-using your material to create a product they are going to sell. I’m not sure if I believe that is so different than a human employee doing the same thing.

      https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=34324208

      I still think we should have the ability to opt out like we do with search engines and webcrawlers, but if the algorithm works ideally and learns but does not recycle content, is it truly any different from a factory of workers pumping out clones of popular series on Amazon? I honestly don’t know the answer to that.

      • deweydecibel@lemmy.world
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        10 months ago

        The problem is not the technology, the problem is the businesses and the people behind them.

        These tools were made with the explicit purpose of taking the content that they did not create, repurposing them, and creating a product. Throw all these conversation about intelligence and learning out the fucking window, what matters is what the thing does, and why it was created to do that thing.

        Until we reach a point where there is some sort of AI out there that has any semblance of free will, and can choose not to learn if fed certain information, and choose not to respond to input given to it without being programmed to do not respond, then we are not talking about intelligence, we are talking about a tool. No matter how they dress it up.

        Stop arguing about this on their terms, because they’re gaslighting the fuck out of you.

      • Appoxo@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        10 months ago

        Afaik the OpenAI bot may choose to ignore it? At least that’s what another user claimed it does.

        • JohnEdwa@sopuli.xyz
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          10 months ago

          Robots.txt has been always ignored by some bots, it’s just a guideline originally meant to prevent excessive bandwidth usage by search indexing bots and is entirely voluntary.

          Archive.org bot for example has completely ignored it since 2017.

      • Mossy Feathers (She/They)@pawb.social
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        10 months ago

        This is kinda my take on it. However, the way I see it is that the AI isn’t intelligent enough yet to truly create something original. As such, right now AI is closer to being a tool than a being. Because of that, it somewhat bothers me that I’m being used to teach a tool. If I thought that companies like OpenAI were truly trying to create beings and not tools, then I’d feel differently.

        It’s kinda nuanced, but a being can voluntarily determine whether or not something is copyright infringing, understand why that might be an issue, and then decide whether or not to continue writing based on that. A tool can’t really do that. You can try and add filters to a tool to avoid writing copy written text, but that will have flaws and holes in it. A being who understands what it’s writing and what makes it plagiarism vs reference vs homage/inspiration/whatever is less likely to have those issues.

    • rar@discuss.online
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      10 months ago

      It’s all federated, so it would be strange the bots didn’t scrape anything off.

  • axo@lemmy.world
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    10 months ago

    I barely post on reddit, just lurk but this made me finally sign up for an account here.

  • red_pigeon@lemm.ee
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    10 months ago

    I stopped using reddit after they dropped the bomb on the devs and I’m not a fan of the company.

    I understand the hatred towards them, but this is definitely expected from a company like reddit, and any other social media for that matter. As users we must be aware that we don’t own the content in their platform.

    I wouldn’t be surprised if the same story comes from Instagram tomorrow, though I suppose there will be a bigger outcry then.

    • jivandabeast@lemmy.browntown.dev
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      10 months ago

      Honestly over the last year since the great migration, the discussions on lemmy have really grown and matured to the point where i don’t really see the value of reddit anymore

      • crimroy@sopuli.xyz
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        10 months ago

        The real value of reddit for me lies in its cache of information contained in answers to questions from over the years. Whenever I’m looking online for a solution to a problem I’m trying to solve I’ll eventually add “reddit” to the search and I almost always find the answer that way.

      • vladmech@lemmy.world
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        10 months ago

        The only use I have for Reddit anymore is for super niche information. For example we were planning to go to Six Flags Discovery Kingdom today but it’s going to rain this afternoon. I checked their site and it said they were open 11-6, my BIL checked their app and at 11:30 it said they were currently closed. Found a Reddit post from someone confirming the park was closed for the weekend, and we didn’t waste a trip up. (as an extra annoying aside, apparently this information was posted on Six Flag’s Instagram page, because expecting a huge company to maintain a website is I guess just too much when they can offload it to social media.)

      • Kedly@lemm.ee
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        10 months ago

        For me there’s still value in the niche communities like r/rimworld and the like, but for everything else I’m firmly on Lemmy now

    • Usul_00_@lemmy.world
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      10 months ago

      Don’t know if it was against usage terms, but I have been able to get chatgpt answers written ‘in the style of’ various subreddits since the initial release (or perhaps the second release)

  • mtchristo@lemm.ee
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    10 months ago

    I bet they can scrape Lemmy content for free then. There are no legal mechanisms to prevent them from doing so.

    • FiskFisk33@startrek.website
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      10 months ago

      I rather my data I’ve chosen to make public is free and accessible to all, than it being sold to the highest bidder.

      • baseless_discourse@mander.xyz
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        10 months ago

        With that being said, I am not pleased that my content is packaged into a proprietary AI, and sold for money.

        I think there are ways to opt-out of AI collection, at least for big companies. I wonder if it is implemented in Lemmy-UI and/or terms and conditions.

        • FiskFisk33@startrek.website
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          10 months ago

          on the other hand, if there’s troves of free data, that takes the upper hand from the companies that can afford paying for it, and gives open source a much better chance at staying competitive.

        • General_Effort@lemmy.world
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          10 months ago

          You opt-out so that there is less free training data, making Reddit’s data all the more valuable. I’m sure spez will be thankful.

    • Trollception@lemmy.world
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      10 months ago

      Yes but i think reddit is many times more valuable than Lemmy. I just haven’t found the same level of very specific subreddits that have lots and lots of activity. Most of the traffic here is memes, politics, news and Linux lovin. On reddit if I needed to find a community about my local town it’s no problem and there are tens or hundreds of daily posts. The same community does exist on Lemmy but the last post was 6 months ago.

      • Link@rentadrunk.org
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        10 months ago

        I completely agree. There are lots of communities on Reddit that are missing on Lemmy. Have you tried posting your community? It might entice people to participate!

    • SpaceCowboy@lemmy.ca
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      10 months ago

      Well there’s copyright law. There’s already lawsuits happening so we’ll have to see how this shakes out.

      But even if the AI companies lose the lawsuits, I think it’s likely they’ll still have access to content where the T&C of the site says they’re allowed to sell the data.

    • Wappen@lemmy.world
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      10 months ago

      Hm but don’t you automatically own the stuff you create yourself, as long as you don’t consent to giving it away? I don’t know the terms and conditions of my Lemmy instance though.

      • dgmib@lemmy.world
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        10 months ago

        When was the last time anyone read the T&Cs of a social media website?

        They basically all have a clause to the effect that you grant them a permanent, irrevocable license do whatever they want with anything you post.

        You might still own the copyright to any content you produce, but by posting you’re granting them permission to do basically anything with it, including reselling it.

  • mellowheat@suppo.fi
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    10 months ago

    Well of course, that’s the #1 reason why everyone stopped providing free-to-use APIs last year. Because AI companies were getting all that data for free via those APIs.

  • JigglypuffSeenFromAbove@lemmy.world
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    10 months ago

    Slightly unrelated question, but is there an easy way to delete all my Reddit posts and comments? I used the Nuke add-on in the past, but it doesn’t work anymore.

    I wanna delete my Reddit account, but I’d prefer to erase my history before doing that.

  • Morcyphr@lemmy.one
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    10 months ago

    Who cares? Fuck reddit. Half the content is bots anyway. So, bots stealing content to train AI to make content, which the bots will steal and repost. Circle of death for reddit. Good luck with that IPO.

  • COASTER1921@lemmy.ml
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    10 months ago

    If they hadn’t applied the same charges to legitimate 3rd party applications they could still do this and have avoided the massive community backlash.

    Considering their horrible track record with advertising and selling Reddit premium this should be the single best way for them to finally monetize their platform. They didn’t need to destroy what little credibility they had remaining to their users to get to this point, but for whatever reason they did.

    • Fake4000@lemmy.worldOP
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      10 months ago

      What I don’t understand is that they had the option of providing a free service to all third party apps provided there was no commercial use.

      They could have easily asked for a cut from any AI company using their data for training.

      • COASTER1921@lemmy.ml
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        10 months ago

        Not only did they have the option, as I understand it the API was even configured as such since all requests from an app shared the same API key. They’re basically whitelisting like this now but only for the accessibility oriented 3rd party apps.

  • Druid@lemmy.zip
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    10 months ago

    I just Googled my reddit handle and it’s appalling that I found websites on the internet that archived a bunch of my posts on there including pictures I posted. I’m not sure what I expected, but it’s still kinda annoying. Even though I deleted my comments after editing them and deleting my entire account

    • Lojcs@lemm.ee
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      10 months ago

      That’s been an issue for a long time. Fake “blogs” made of scraped reddit posts.

  • xantoxis@lemmy.world
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    10 months ago

    Damn. I keep meaning to use one of those things that deletes all your reddit data. I doubt it’ll actually do anything (reddit has no ethical framework so they won’t think twice about indexing “deleted” data) but I still need to do that.

    • ipkpjersi@lemmy.ml
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      10 months ago

      I’d bet a year of my salary that it only deletes it from public view so people can no longer get helped from Reddit’s Google search results, but a copy (or more than one copy) is still retained on their internal servers.

      • Dettweiler@lemm.ee
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        10 months ago

        The trick is to turn everything into randomized garbage and then delete it later. A lot of those purge services offer that feature. It just swaps the words with others; so on the surface it looks like proper written text, but it makes absolutely no sense.

        Aside from removing your content that they’re profiting from, it also feeds AI scrapers pure garbage in the event that your content is restored.

        • JeeBaiChow@lemmy.world
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          10 months ago

          Me, I’d prefer to fill it in with fake news. Let them train their bots on ‘taylor swift is an alien psyop trained to infiltrate the highest levels of govt to fulfill the agenda of the radical left instellar warmongering fearlords …’

        • Crackhappy@lemmy.world
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          10 months ago

          Yep. I did that over a month to all of my posts and comments, then deleted it all a week later before deleting my account.

        • ipkpjersi@lemmy.ml
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          10 months ago

          That’s assuming they update their backups, or that if they do update their backups they don’t keep historical versions.

          IMO once the data has been shared it is no longer safe and there’s nothing we can do.

      • HonorIsDead@lemmy.world
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        10 months ago

        Maybe I’m miss remembering but weren’t they restoring stuff users deleted during the API protest?

        • philodendron@lemdro.id
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          10 months ago

          They were. One user got so upset he live-streamed himself individually deleting every post and comment he’d ever made. Reddit restored it all right after.

    • Alpha71@lemmy.world
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      10 months ago

      Yeah, I deleted a banned account only to still find the posts I made still up. So I went in and manually deleted EVEY. SINGLE. ONE.

      Guess what. They still show up.