rare chinese government w
Technology
This is a most excellent place for technology news and articles.
Our Rules
- Follow the lemmy.world rules.
- Only tech related content.
- Be excellent to each other!
- Mod approved content bots can post up to 10 articles per day.
- Threads asking for personal tech support may be deleted.
- Politics threads may be removed.
- No memes allowed as posts, OK to post as comments.
- Only approved bots from the list below, this includes using AI responses and summaries. To ask if your bot can be added please contact a mod.
- Check for duplicates before posting, duplicates may be removed
- Accounts 7 days and younger will have their posts automatically removed.
Approved Bots
Except when the government is immune to this and passes things off as real since it isn't marked as AI.
yeah, if im going to live in a hypercapitalist shit hole where the internet is rabidly censored and there are no environmental protections, I'd rather have watermarks on the AI slop than nazis everywhere.
not rare. it's a tool that will be used to silence critics.
Not really rare these days when you compare them to America
For all the humans rights abuses, one has to admit that China is at least ruthlessly efficient.
Not really. Sure, China is able to make unpopular decisions better then democracies, but that makes them inefficient in different directions. E.g. high speed rail in areas where it is not needed but greatly lacking freight trains. Or their housing bubble.
China no doubt has it's problems. It's just crazy to think how fast the country has progressed in the last 50 years.
you don't think this will be exploited to hurt people?
Anyone's praising this doesn't understand that this request is basically impossible and is merely posturing.
I'm a developer and I work a lot with LLM data and the only way to detect LLM text is through watermarks where some words or expressions are statistically preferred over others. This means it's only effective on large bodies of text that are not modified further.
If you take LLM content and remix it using traditional natural language processing then it's done - the content is indistinguishable and untraceable and it takes like 50 lines of python code and a few milliseconds of computing.
I think you're looking past the real reason why this is happening.
it's not to improve the quality of information.
it's to silence anyone with dissenting opinions of the Chinese Government.
it's easy to label something. some Chinese citizen posts something about the government, tagged as AI, they're fined, jailed, etc.
100% thats exactly what's happening and I can't believe people are so blinded by AI generato hate to praise stuff like that.
A government policy isn’t just posturing because the state now has a rule to cite if they’re gonna issue you a fine or whatever the punishment is supposed to be. So you will either comply, or go underground or abroad. That’s a real consequence.
So it's just another way for authoritarians to exert power over people then?
The only way to address AI is through low level laws we already have like anti-discrimination, defamation, online bullying etc. But those give people more rights and protections and you can't have that.
it’s just another way for authoritarians to exert power over people then?
exert power over people to stop them from doing what?
I mean you can just say that about any and every law or policy. No need to be so knee-jerk about it. The point I'm making is it isn't just posturing. It's not like a company pretending to promise to watermark their AI outputs; it's a government saying you must comply with new rule.
I would love to delve into this a little more.
It's impossible because the text these LLM-based models produce would be obtuse to watermark.
Huh?
What about photos and video and audio?! Why are you asking?
What about photos, videos and audio? You should see what the second L means in the LLM before you go at it
The directive includes all types of data: text, images, videos, audio, and even virtual scenes.
LLMs are only one aspect of this, but yeah, probably the most difficult to discern, at least at the moment.
You should read some of the content you're commenting on before posting a critique.
I suggest the shit emjoi being used as the indicator.
Too late now, pal. You've all poisoned the well and now you have to drink it too.
Meanwhile best we can do in America is hide tracking dots in every color printer.
...I'm...
In full agreement with this*
*with the provision that there are ways to ensure this isn't weaponized so that dissident or oppositional speech/photos/art isn't flagged as AI so that it can be filtered out.
There are no ways of ensuring that. Wanting this is suicide for anyone but authoritarians.
Then it should not be done. I laid out my conditionals for it not being terrible.
Or propaganda that doesn’t have it is taken as legitimate.
That doesn't change anything though.
It doesn't matter whether this is used against dissidents or not. Their speech is censured either way. It shouldn't affect the much larger positive effect this will have on the majority of people.
This does provide another tool for them to claim it isn't censored but label it as AI to hurt the credibility of dissidents though. I don't think it doesn't matter.
So in short you disagree which is reasonable given the circumstances.
Besides, wouldn‘t it make much more sense to verify and mark genuine content rather than the slob which is becoming the majority of content?
I like that approach better. Just like I'd rather know what doesn't cause cancer in the state of California at this point.
When the dirty commies do the reforms we all know we need in our countries...
We're so fucked. ⚰️
As a dirty commie: you’ll get over it someday.
Not a bad law if applied to companies and public figures. Complete wishful thinking if applied to individuals.
For companies it's actually enforceable but for individuals it's basically impossible and even if you do catch someone uploading AI-generated stuff: Who cares. It's the intent that matters when it comes to individuals.
Were they trying to besmirch someone's reputation by uploading false images of that person in compromising situations? That's clear bad intent.
Were they trying to incite a riot or intentionally spreading disinformation? Again, clear bad intent.
Were they showing off something cool they made with AI generation? It is of no consequence and should be treated as such.
I agree that it's difficult to enforce such a requirement on individuals. That said, I don't agree that nobody cares for the content they post. If they have "something cool they made with AI generation" - then it's not a big deal to have to mark it as AI-generated.
Notice: Those are not my girlfriend's boobs. I used Photoshop with an AI plug in to make them look fuller.
No thanks mate. Government and anyone selling anything should be held to those standards. If you are an influencer pushing a product for profit that applies to you too.
Would applying a watermark to all the training images force the AI to add a watermark?
Nope. In fact, if you generate a lot of images with AI you'll sometimes notice something resembling a watermark in the output. Demonstrating that the images used to train the model did indeed have watermarks.
Removing such imaginary watermarks is trivial in image2image tools though (it's just a quick extra step after generation).
They don't want to pollute their training data.
Honestly?
Good. I assume this is more about controlling narratives but it's something that should be happening no matter what side of the AI debate you're on.
My favorite genre of comment section is when every other post is talking about how someone/thing the poster doesn't like does something they think is good but they gotta reassure everyone that it'll still be bad.
Yeah, he saved the kitten from the tree, But at what cost? 😔