Don’t quite agree with the above poster but this is the tool they’re referring to and they’re making the argument that it is a metaphor/just the name of the tool and there isn’t a direct connection.
I think they were talking about people slaves, not computer networks. The person above them asked why humans can learn from copyright materials, but machines aren’t allowed to. The next person asked why we can own furniture but not people. To me this seems like they are saying we don’t own slaves for the same reason computer programs shouldn’t be allowed to learn from copyright materials. I’d say we don’t own slaves because as a society we value and believe in individuality, personal choice, and bodily autonomy, and I don’t see how these relate to dictating what content you train computer models on.
What’s the connection between owning slaves and using computer tools? I don’t really follow this jump in logic.
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Master/slave_(technology)
Don’t quite agree with the above poster but this is the tool they’re referring to and they’re making the argument that it is a metaphor/just the name of the tool and there isn’t a direct connection.
I think they were talking about people slaves, not computer networks. The person above them asked why humans can learn from copyright materials, but machines aren’t allowed to. The next person asked why we can own furniture but not people. To me this seems like they are saying we don’t own slaves for the same reason computer programs shouldn’t be allowed to learn from copyright materials. I’d say we don’t own slaves because as a society we value and believe in individuality, personal choice, and bodily autonomy, and I don’t see how these relate to dictating what content you train computer models on.
Have you ever considered the possibility that unliving objects are not, in fact, people?