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onlinepersona, to linuxmemes in I don't...

Move fast and break things

Bro, wayland is 15 years old

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onlinepersona, to piracy in Film studios demand IP addresses of people who discussed piracy on Reddit

Tell me you know nothing about computers without telling me you know nothing about computers.

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onlinepersona, to linux in Why more PC gaming handhelds should ditch Windows for SteamOS

Nobody knows yet 🤷 I’ll do it anyway

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onlinepersona, to opensource in Don't be that guy.

You’re welcome. Thank you for reading :)

onlinepersona, (edited ) to linuxmemes in Hey, have you ever heard of Pop!_OS?

Not entirely the same. nix is a build-tool, package manager and DSL. NixOS is the OS built on top of that. nixlang.wiki explains it

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onlinepersona, (edited ) to opensource in Don't be that guy.

🙂 my bad

No, not sue me for lemmy comments. AI is trained with lots of data. The world wide web is full of publicly accessible data like our comments. However, not all publicly accessible data may be used without a license. Examples thereof are news paper articles, videos, still pictures, etc. Normally, if you want to use those commercially, consent has to be given by the license holder and a in some cases a fee has to be paid.

Microsoft Copilot is an AI model to help people write code. However, it was trained mostly on opensource code (code made publicly available) which was very often licensed. And it is done so in such a manner that commercial use is allowed with the obligation to make that commercial code publicly available too. Microsoft does not make the code for Copilot publicly accessible and uses code licensed in many, many other ways - and it does so without asking for consent.

This is often a double standard as companies that hide their code fight very hard to keep it secret and/or pursue those in court who do not get a license to use it. However, they will happily use licensed consent to their benefit without consent nor potential payment.

With some clever tricks, AIs have been duped into revealing their training data (often licensed, sometimes very private e.g addresses, birthday, health information, etc.). Lawsuits have ensued (against the AI owners like Microsoft) and are currently active with a pending verdict. Until the verdicts come, I add the license link to my comments. Who knows, maybe it will have an impact, maybe not.

Hopefully I could explain the situation in an understandable manner for you.

Have a good day.

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onlinepersona, to linuxmemes in Hey, have you ever heard of Pop!_OS?

Get on the NixOS train, loser. Arch is too easy. /s

onlinepersona, to opensource in Don't be that guy.

Just to be sure, is this a serious question or a troll?

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onlinepersona, to piracy in Recent Nebula content

“You should own what you pay for” to put it another way, I think.

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onlinepersona, to piracy in Youtube has better anti-adblock now. Other than Invidious, any way around it? Purging and re-dowloading the ublock stuff didn't work

Is this an American thing? Haven’t had any issues with this in the EU

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onlinepersona, to opensource in Don't be that guy.

It’s a non-commercial copyleft licence for the comment in case the case against Microsoft’s CoPilot is won.

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onlinepersona, to opensource in Don't be that guy.

Then you’re right. The frustration would be understandable, the expression thereof towards the developer, not.

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onlinepersona, to linux in Why more PC gaming handhelds should ditch Windows for SteamOS

AI

onlinepersona, (edited ) to linux in What's your current favorite distro that isn't Arch, Debian or Fedora?

Favorite? No. Most acceptable: NixOS.

The worst documentation of a linux distro I have ever encountered, but the declarative model has convinced me I don’t want something else. Now I’m just waiting for other distros to pop up that are declarative as well. (Guix? No thanks, I’m not a fan of endless parentheses)

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onlinepersona, to opensource in Don't be that guy.

If that’s what you get from a paid product, why would you assume it’s better for a free product?

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