IncognitoErgoSum
You don’t need to block someone to end a conversation. Just say “you’re acting in bad faith, and I’m done here”, then stop replying to them. They’ll most likely reply to you once or twice, and that’ll be it. And if you use kbin’s block function, you’ll never even know.
If you’re engaging with someone who is acting in bad faith for that long, you’re most likely trying to convince the audience that the other person is wrong. If the fact that they’re arguing in bad faith 10 hours in isn’t abundantly clear to any person with half a brain reading your thread, then maybe they’re not acting in bad faith and they just disagree with you on something you feel strongly about.
Also, you kind of said the quiet part loud there. “Engaging in bad faith” isn’t, in and of itself, the same as harassment. I’m sure that there are individual communities on kbin where critics of particular ideas and ideologies are silenced, and if that’s what you need in order for your ideas to stand, then I’d suggest staying in those communities. The general consensus here seems to be that if you’re out arguing in public and someone isn’t actually harassing you (even if they disagree with you in a way that you believe constitutes “bad faith”), then they should be allowed to speak. Reddit’s toxic climate has just been exacerbated by their bad block feature, because now the motivation when you get into an argument is to be the first to block so that you’re guaranteed to have the last word. It doesn’t lead to useful discourse.
Bare minimum, if you want block to function this way, then you should have to delete any un-replied-to comments of yours in order to be able to do it so as to remove the perverse incentive to abuse the feature to “win” arguments. I’m sure you’d find that agreeable?
I’m guessing that when you’re losing an argument, you like to post a response and then block the other person so you get the last word, then convince yourself that the other person was a “sealion” or something. Reddit’s block system is primarily used that way. If you don’t like how blocking works here, I recommend Reddit.
I personally came here to get away from Reddit’s “features” like private downvotes and silencing people who disagree with you, because they promote exactly the kind of toxic discussion I want to avoid.
If you’re being harassed, report it.
I said it was a neural network.
You said it wasn’t.
I asked you for a link.
You told me to do your homework for you.
I did your homework. Your homework says it’s a neural network. I suggest you read it, since I took the time to find it for you.
Anyone who knows the first thing about neural networks knows that, yes, artificial neurons are simulated with matrix multiplications, why is why people use GPUs to do them. The simulations are not down to the molecule becuase they don’t need to be. The individual neurons are relatively simple math, but when you get into billions of something, you don’t need extreme complexity for new properties to emerge (in fact, the whole idea of emergent properties is that they arise from collections of simple things, like the rules of the Game of Life, for instance, which are far simpler than simulated neurons). Nothing about this makes me wrong about what I’m talking about for the purposes of copyright. Neural networks store concepts. They don’t archive copies of data.
LOL, I love kbin’s public downvote records. I quoted a bunch of different sources demonstrating that you’re wrong, and rather than own up to it and apologize for preaching from atop Mt. Dunning-Kruger, you downvoted me and ran off.
I advise you to step out of whatever echo chamber you’ve holed yourself up in and learn a bit about AI before opining on it further.
I’m not sure why you’re asking that. You literally just asked me if I’m refusing to admit that AI could cause trouble for people’s livelihoods. I don’t know where you even got that idea. I never asked you anything about whether you admit it could help with things, because that’s irrelevant (and also it would be a pretty silly blanket assumption to make).
Are you sure you’re not projecting here? In this entire thread, have you budged an inch based on all the people arguing against your original post?
Who am I supposed to be budging for? Of the three people here who are actually arguing with me, you’re the only one who isn’t saying they’re going to slash my car tires and likening personal AI use to eating steak in terms of power usage (it’s not even in the same ballpark), or claiming that Stable Diffusion doesn’t use a neural network. I only replied to the other guy’s most recent comment because I don’t want to be swiftboated – people will believe other people who confidently state something that they find validating, even if they’re dead wrong.
We just seem to mostly have a difference of opinion. I don’t get the sense that you’re making up your own facts. And fundamentally, I’m not convinced of the idea that only a small group of people deserve laws protecting their jobs from automation, particularly not at the expense of the rest of us. If we want to grant people relief from having their jobs automated away, we need to be doing that for everybody, and the answer to that isn’t copyright law.
And as far as AI being used to automate dangerous jobs, copyright isn’t going to stop that at all. Tesla’s dangerous auto-pilot function (honestly, I have no idea if that’s a neural network or just a regular computer program) uses data that Tesla gathers themselves. Any pharmaceutical company that develops an AI for making medicines will train it on their own trade secrets. Same with AI surgeons, AI-operated heavy machinery, and so on. None of that is going to be affected by copyright, and public concerns about safety aren’t going to get in the way of stockholders and their profits anymore than it has in the past. If you want to talk about the dangers of overreliance on AI doing dangerous work, then by all means talk about that. This copyright fight, for those large companies, is a beneficial distraction.