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Culture War Roundup for the week of December 19, 2022

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A completed model doesn't really have stored information about the datasets used to generate it in any accessible manner (not least of all because it could easily outsize the model by several orders of magnitude). Someone could easily say a model was generated on dataset X and instead use dataset X + dataset Y, and proving otherwise would be very hard at current understanding of how models work.

And there's a variety of complications downstream from that -- if the original model X was trained on purely legal data, and someone brings a tuned model that they say was only trained on a subselection from rights-compliant source, for example.

(And then there's the downstream economic forces: if half of the image hosts require you to give up whatever AI/ML rights for submission, then this goes wonky places even if most hardcore artists don't use them.)

Right the only way to make this work would be nothing up your sleeve training-wise. You'd provide your training set and if your model can't replicate, bam, you're busted.

You'd need to disclose not only your training set, and model, but also the training environment and initial configuration. And then someone would need to spend hundreds to hundreds of thousands to do the actual training.

That's an interestingly roundabout way of mass-banning, but it runs into the same problem as just trying to ban the tech, in that a lot of people are just going to smuggle AI-gen outputs as 'naturally'-generated.

You'd need to disclose not only your training set, and model, but also the training environment and initial configuration

Done and done.

That's an interestingly roundabout way of mass-banning

I'm ok with this.

a lot of people are just going to smuggle AI-gen outputs as 'naturally'-generated.

Which is going to happen anyway, in fact it already is happening.