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disntthinkthis

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disntthinkthis
·3 lata temu·discuss
[flagged]
disntthinkthis
·3 lata temu·discuss
YouTube has been showing me a ton of channels with low Hundreds of views recently, and they’re very to my taste. Ymmv but they’re doing well at exactly what you’re complaining about in my experience
disntthinkthis
·3 lata temu·discuss
That sounds severe and so unlike what I’ve experienced. But some amount of noise in vision is normal, you just don’t notice it unless you focus on it, or have a background that really makes it apparently. Light is inherently noisy. If you look at a blank sheet of paper and all you see is #FFFFFF, you’re not paying attention.
disntthinkthis
·3 lata temu·discuss
That’s the modern variation. The original didn’t have any framing like they.
disntthinkthis
·3 lata temu·discuss
I feel like it’s normal but people just don’t notice. Light is naturally noisy.
disntthinkthis
·3 lata temu·discuss
…yet in the same article he’s talking about selling the data to LLM developers.

It’s hard to make sense of.
disntthinkthis
·3 lata temu·discuss
Except that Stack Overflow’s CEO, in this very article, says that it’s a violation of the Creative Commons license to train an LLM on their answers. So what he’s actually proposing is very unclear.

> When AI companies sell their models to customers, they “are unable to attribute each and every one of the community members whose questions and answers were used to train the model, thereby breaching the Creative Commons license,” Chandrasekar says.