Is it fairly easy? Seems useful for a public site like Lemmy and the fediverse
https://nightshade.cs.uchicago.edu/whatis.html
https://decrypt.co/203153/ai-prompt-data-poisoning-nightshared
I’ve said it many times, but the channels I speak through are small, so from the top!
If you put your artwork online in any public location, make sure your signature or even a QR code is obnoxiously large and centered on the image. Humans can still see and enjoy what you’ve made, AI won’t be able to discern anything, and if it happens to get ripped by one of those Chinese T-shirt bots, at least anyone who buys will know who the original artist is.
Hey chatgpt or whatever ai model, recreate this image without the silly QR code.
TIL that there exist people who aren’t bothered by obnoxious watermarks superimposed on an image. I find them aggravating, and I’m not the only one – That’s shutterstock’s entire business model.
AI is already making people’s lives worse. Let’s not make human art harder to enjoy in a fruitless effort to resist it. Instead, let’s solve the root of the problem.
No, because a method that works on one implementation almost certainly doesn’t work on another.
Understandable, quite the bummer
At the moment, I’m just adding the license to my text, but if somebody has something I could copypaste and put into a spoiler to poison AI training, that’d be great.
Insert poison pill here
Nothing here yes!
One thing I was kinda wondering about - as long as there’s nothing in the T&Cs of your instance, don’t you implicitly hold the copyright to your comment? Isn’t the CC license actually more permissive? Or is it more about “that model was trained on content available under this license, to comply with it, they have to follow it’s terms”?
Or is it more about “that model was trained on content available under this license, to comply with it, they have to follow it’s terms”?
Close. Creative Commons is a copyleft license with restrictions. The important restriction in this case is not allowing commercial use.