Reddit Signs AI Content Licensing Deal Ahead of IPO::Reddit Inc. has signed a contract allowing a company to train its artificial intelligence models on the social media platform’s content, according to people familiar with the matter, as it nears the potential launch of its long-awaited initial public offering.

  • 800XL@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    Long-awaited, said no one. Is AI going to fabricate even more of the bullshit on reddit then?

    • electricprism@lemmy.ml
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      1 year ago

      Problem is Reddit content and votes aren’t all human so unless they kept a record of which parts are just chatbots and which votes were faked its not exactly useful to train on in a pure sense.

      Considering the disinformation wars and botnets between the big countries its hard to even get a idea of what people really think and what is bullshit and what isn’t.

      In any case I’m glad reddit has fucked themselves. This small corner of sanity is a bastion in a shit blizzard.

  • BlueÆther@no.lastname.nz
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    1 year ago

    I’ve been on reddit, I don’t know that I would like to use a LLM trained on much of the content there (excluding tech/DIY space)

    • muntedcrocodile@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      Reddit is actually pretty decent for training llms. Funny enough an ai finetuned on 4chan does better in intelegence benchmarks.

  • galoisghost@aussie.zone
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    1 year ago

    Now I wish I could remember what the nonsense I replaced all of my content with before I deleted my account.

  • General_Effort@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    They say it’s $60 million on an annualized basis. I wonder who’d pay that, given that you can probably scrape it for free.

    Maybe it’s the AI act in the EU. That might cause trouble in that regard. The US is seeing a lot of rent-seeker PR, too, of course. That might cause some to hedge their bets.

    Maybe some people had not realized that yet, but limiting fair use does not just benefit the traditional media corporations but also the likes of Reddit, Facebook, Apple, etc. Making “robots.txt” legally binding would only benefit the tech companies.