- cross-posted to:
- technology@lemmy.world
- cross-posted to:
- technology@lemmy.world
This should come as no surprise to anyone who has been paying attention to Google, but it’s a reminder to get off of their services if you’re concerned about your data privacy. A Slashdot commenter wondered whether this also applies to the contents of emails on gmail. I’m going to assume it does.
Every AI company already does this, Google are just being nice by telling you.
But every AI company isn’t Google. Google is an information platform with access to more information than its competitors.
I find that extremely problematic and absolutely anti-competitive.
I’m not totally surprised that this is happening wit the new found movement in AI. It was only a matter of time that this happened, the question I have is was there ever conversations behind closed doors on how to prevent this.
All llms are made with scraped data, all image generative services as well.
If data were to become restricted and not public property the moment it’s posted online, then only Adobe and Shutterstock could legally make an image generation service.
Don’t fall into the game of trying to restrict public data, it will only hurt us, the little guys, in the long run.
If posted to a public forum like this one, non-commercial usage is obviously required. On the biggest (i.e., for-profit) social platforms, commercial use is also required (if I’m understanding those terms correctly, at least).
There is stuff publicly available online that has restrictions on commercial use. Because I’d rather see how open source AI generation goes, I’d prefer to have non-commercial efforts get that sweet data without giving it to the major tech companies.
Wonder if this would affect things like Google Docs? Does publicly available just mean “public to google”?
i wonder if there is a way to counter this by maybe including info at the beginning of any post that ruins the data being scraped
BEANS