• teawrecks@sopuli.xyz
    link
    fedilink
    arrow-up
    5
    ·
    1 year ago

    With all due respect, you’re still not understanding what I’m saying.

    If you traveled back 50+ years to when computers took up several hundred sq ft, one might try to make the same argument as you: “don’t rent time on IBM’s mainframe, they can see everything you’re computing and could sell it to your competitor! Computers are always owned by the corporate elite, therefore computers are bad and the technology should be avoided!” But fast forward to today, and now you can own your own PC and do everything you want to with it without anyone else involved. The tech progressed. It wasn’t wrong to not trust corporate owned computing, but the future of a tech itself is completely independent from the corporations who develop them.

    For a more recent example, nearly 1 year ago, ChatGPT was released to the world. It was the first time most people had any experience with a LLM. And everything you sent to the bot was given to a proprietary, for profit algorithm to further their corporate interests. One might have been tempted to say that LLMs and AI would always serve the corporate elite, and we should avoid the technology like the plague. But fast forward to now, not even one year later, and people have replicated the tech in open source projects which you can run locally on your own hardware. Even Meta (the epitome of corporate control) has open sourced LLaMA to run for your own purposes without them seeing any of it (granted the licenses will prevent what you can do commercially).

    The story is the same for virtually any new technology, so my point is, to denounce all of AVs because today corporations own it is demonstrably shortsighted. Again, I’m not interested in the proprietary solutions available right now, but once the tech develops and we start seeing some open standards and repairability enter the picture, I’ll be all for it.

    • Kornblumenratte@feddit.de
      link
      fedilink
      arrow-up
      1
      ·
      1 year ago

      I’m not sure your idea of 70s and 80s IT infrastructure is historically accurate.

      50 years ago it was technically impossible to rent time on a mainframe/server owned by a third party without having physical access to the hardware.

      You, or to be more accurate, your company would buy a mainframe and hire a mathematician turned programmer to write the software you need.

      Even if – later in the course of IT development – you/your company did not develop your own software but bought proprietary software this software was technically not able to “call back home” until internet connection became standard.

      So no, computers did not start with “the corporate elite” controlling them.

      Computerized cars, on the other hand, are controlled by their manufycturers since they were introduced. There is no open source alternative.

      Open standards for computerized cars would be great — but I’m very pessimistic they will evolve unless publically funded and/or enforced.

    • abhibeckert@beehaw.org
      link
      fedilink
      arrow-up
      1
      ·
      edit-2
      1 year ago

      nearly 1 year ago, ChatGPT was released to the world. It was the first time most people had any experience with a LLM. And everything you sent to the bot was given to a proprietary, for profit algorithm to further their corporate interests

      You might want to pick another example, because OpenAI was originally founded as a non-profit organisation, and in order to avoid going bankrupt they became a “limited” profit organisation, which allowed them to source funding from more sources… but really allow them to ever become a big greedy tech company. All they’re able to do is offer some potential return to the people who are giving them hundreds of billions of dollars with no guarantee they’ll ever get it back.

      • teawrecks@sopuli.xyz
        link
        fedilink
        arrow-up
        2
        ·
        1 year ago

        Maybe reread my post. I specifically picked ChatGPT as an example of proprietary corporate control over LLM tech.