this post was submitted on 06 Sep 2024
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The problem with your argument is that it is 100% possible to get ChatGPT to produce verbatim extracts of copyrighted works. This has been suppressed by OpenAI in a rather brute force kind of way, by prohibiting the prompts that have been found so far to do this (e.g. the infamous "poetry poetry poetry..." ad infinitum hack), but the possibility is still there, no matter how much they try to plaster over it. In fact there are some people, much smarter than me, who see technical similarities between compression technology and the process of training an LLM, calling it a "blurry JPEG of the Internet"... the point being, you wouldn't allow distribution of a copyrighted book just because you compressed it in a ZIP file first.
Exactly! This is the core of the argument The New York Times made against OpenAI. And I think they are right.
The examples they provided were for very widely distributed stories (i.e. present in the data set many times over). The prompts they used were not provided. How many times they had to prompt was not provided. Their results are very difficult to reproduce, if not impossible, especially on newer models.
I mean, sure, it happens. But it's not a generalizable problem. You're not going to get it to regurgitate your Lemmy comment, even if they've trained on it. You can't just go and ask it to write Harry Potter and the goblet of fire for you. It's not the intended purpose of this technology. I expect it'll largely be a solved problem in 5-10 years, if not sooner.