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Timeline for Are OpenAI answers under CC BY-SA?

Current License: CC BY-SA 4.0

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May 15 at 20:32 comment added NoDataDumpNoContribution It's all not settled in courts, so we simply don't know and need to wait. My naive approach would be that even fair uses can become unfair uses if done automatically on a very large scale. And commercially profiting from content creators without somehow letting them participate in the profit is not ethical. What would OpenAI be without the content. A human can surely do the same but only to a very limited extent, one might make a distinction there in the future. And if the current laws don't say that, maybe they can be made to say that. Content creators will be thankful.
May 11 at 10:21 comment added chx If you believe they'll attribute anything then I have a bridge to sell you.
May 11 at 4:54 comment added PM 2Ring Obviously, this process isn't foolproof, and it requires fine-tuning so it doesn't waste effort looking for attribution for common knowledge. But IMHO it's a hell of a lot better than the current situation, where LLMs are using our content and giving zero attribution.
May 11 at 4:54 comment added PM 2Ring @chx Right. A GPT works on probabilities. At each step, it randomly chooses a token from a small pool of tokens which give a high score if chosen as the next token in the token stream it's generating. And those scores are derived from literally millions of token sequences in the training data. However, token sequences that have high scores are quite likely to exist as sequences in the training data. So when the AI generates a chunk (sentence, paragraph, a function in code, etc) it just needs to do a search in the current SO data to see if it can find a near match.
May 10 at 21:24 history edited NotTheDr01ds CC BY-SA 4.0
Err
May 10 at 14:07 comment added chx My understanding was the current LLMs do not have a "link" between the source and the result -- the token predictor doesn't "know" why it's predicting what it predicts. If this understanding is correct how is it going to attribute anything?
May 9 at 18:06 history answered NotTheDr01ds CC BY-SA 4.0