Maven, a new social network backed by OpenAI’s Sam Altman, found itself in a controversy today when it imported a huge amount of posts and profiles from the Fediverse, and then ran AI analysis to alter the content.

  • hollyberries@programming.dev
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    5 months ago

    To be honest, the extreme negative reaction was a surprise to me, as I thought interaction between disparate systems was the entire point, but clearly we didn’t navigate the culture correctly.

    Noooo fucking shit? If they spent more than a minute on a proper instance and not milquetoast mastodon dot social, they would have realised that a good number of fedi users despise shenanigans like this?

  • FinchHaven@sfba.social
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    5 months ago

    @deadsuperhero

    Been looking into #Maven all morning

    Just going to copy-paste two posts

    The head admin/dev @jsecretan claims:

    “Happy to remove any of your posts from Maven and cease ingestion from those servers going forward”

    So, after the fact, individuals on Mastodon have to contact you personally and ask you to stop?

    Is that your position?

    Reminds me of Byron Miller (@Supernovae @universeodon.com) and his since-deleted “In four months of having full text seach [we haven’t heard from anyone who has be directly harmed]…”

    That last is a paraphrase because Supernovae has pretty much removed any mention of himself from the Fediverse, right down to deleting his involvement with Mastodon on Github, causing renchap to opine:

    “I suspect that @Supernovae closed it because they do not want to be involved with Mastodon anymore.”

    here: https://github.com/mastodon/mastodon/issues/21398#issuecomment-2145321855

    Executive summary: there are a lot of people On Here™ who don’t appreciated every new idea all you bright-eyed young creatives can come up with

    • FinchHaven@sfba.social
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      5 months ago

      @deadsuperhero

      Instructive to read #Maven’s #About page and see who’s behind it.

      Here: https://www.heymaven.com/about

      Selected excerpts from “Who is behind Maven?”

      “CEO Ken Stanley is an expert on open-ended discovery in both AI and human systems and … (most recently leading the Open-Endedness Team at #OpenAI ).”

      At: “Is Maven part of a larger company?”

      “No, Maven is an independent startup.”

      But

      "Here are a few of our investors, who also commented on their reasons for supporting Maven:

      -- Ev Williams, co-founder of #Twitter: “Maven lets you follow your deepest curiosities instead of the trends of the day.”

      -- Sam Altman, CEO of OpenAI: ”In Maven, there is a chance for AI to play a role in fixing much that is broken in our online discourse.”

      -- Rana El Kaliouby, co-founder of Affectiva…"

      Sam Altman

      #SamAltman

      Where have I heard that name before?

      • fossphi@lemm.ee
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        5 months ago

        Sam Altman

        Everything he touches tends to inevitably turn to shit. This guy and his fellow silicon valley cronies are scum of the earth

  • LiveLM@lemmy.zip
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    5 months ago

    A short while ago, Jimmy Secretan posted this response on everything that happened today:
    “We have paused everything related to our Fediverse ingestion for now and we are removing everything ingested.
    To be honest, the extreme negative reaction was a surprise to me, as I thought interaction between disparate systems was the entire point, but clearly we didn’t navigate the culture correctly.”

    Make the world a better place, bully your local tech bro today!

  • QuadratureSurfer@lemmy.world
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    5 months ago

    Hmmm it was even able to pull in private DMs.

    Maybe private DMs on Mastadon aren’t as private as everyone thinks… that, or the open nature of Activity Pub is leaking them somehow?

    Edit - From the article:

    Even more shocking is the revelation that somehow, even private DMs from Mastodon were mirrored on their public site and searchable. How this is even possible is beyond me, as DM’s are ostensibly only between two parties, and the message itself was sent from two hackers.town users.

    From what @[email protected] mentioned below, it sounds like this shouldn’t be very shocking at all.

      • JackbyDev@programming.dev
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        5 months ago

        PM never implied any form of end to end encryption. It only ever meant people couldn’t see it apart from site operators. I genuinely don’t believe people thought it meant otherwise.

      • QuadratureSurfer@lemmy.world
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        5 months ago

        They’re called DMs not PMs

        ? Did you mean that the other way around? And if you did… forgive me, I don’t really use Mastodon. I was never much of a twitter fan. I don’t really like how all of my likes are public (although I guess I have had to get used to that with Lemmy).

          • QuadratureSurfer@lemmy.world
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            5 months ago

            Ah, I see. So it’s the same mistake that Lemmy users make when thinking that Upvotes/Downvotes aren’t public.

            It sounds like DMs on Mastodon are public, but are commonly mistaken to be private then?

    • Sean Tilley@lemmy.mlOPM
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      5 months ago

      The shocking part was less about Maven’s methods or lack of ethics, and more along the lines of “How the fuck did they do that?!”

      • QuadratureSurfer@lemmy.world
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        5 months ago

        What @[email protected] seemed to be implying is that direct messages on Mastodon should be considered “public” rather than “private”.

        I’m assuming that’s along the same lines of how Lemmy users generally think that their upvotes/downvotes are private when in reality, if you know how to look for them, you can see them.

        • delirious_owl@discuss.online
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          2 months ago

          I don’t think we should expect privacy from either. Instead, we need better documentation.

          Personally, I’d appreciate to see a public dashboard displaying everyone’s DMs and upvotes would help.

  • bartolomeo@suppo.fi
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    5 months ago

    And there were people on here saying that licensing your comments CC was stupid…

    • Railcar8095@lemm.ee
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      5 months ago

      Have those but been harvested? Did the users get compensation?

      The day that has any effect aside from bloating the thread, I’ll accept they are not stupid.

        • Railcar8095@lemm.ee
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          5 months ago

          Nobody said to get rid of the laws. I’m telling to enforce them. Posting that and not following through is why people thinks they are stupid.

          I’ll root hard for anybody suing them. If they don’t because they think it’s impossible to win it because it’s hard, then, they are the ones de-facto giving away the law.

    • Nemeski@lemm.ee
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      5 months ago

      Maybe Lemmy should start adding NoAI meta tags to posts and comments like some other websites have started doing for images? Though I doubt it helps that much.

  • feoh@lemmy.ml
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    5 months ago

    I looked at their site and thought: What a #!@$ stupid idea.

    The whole thing stinks of Twitter brain. “Follow topics, not people”? So what you’re saying is that the null brains on Twitter are far too focused on whenever one of the Kardassians farts to focus on anything real?

    Puhh-lease. The Fediverse isn’t about that all.

    Hard pass.

  • Railcar8095@lemm.ee
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    5 months ago

    Please, if there’s a god, don’t let ChatGPT learn from hexbears.

    I don’t want it explaining why actually invading Ukraine is good for Ukraine when I ask for a smoothy recipe.

  • minnix@lemux.minnix.dev
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    5 months ago

    Even more shocking is the revelation that somehow, even private DMs from Mastodon were mirrored on their public site and searchable. How this is even possible is beyond me, as DM’s are ostensibly only between two parties, and the message itself was sent from two hackers.town users.

    I find this hard to believe but stranger things have happened.

    • ShortN0te@lemmy.ml
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      5 months ago

      You missed the point. It is not about if it is private or not, it is how they use it. You are allowed (on some pages) to read news article. Are you allowed to copy and publish them on your own site? No. You have a Copyright on your posts same as a author has on his books.

      If it is legal or not is still to be discussed.

      Similar to how data was mined (or even still is) about users without consent. Now there is for example the GDPR.

      • GBU_28@lemm.ee
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        5 months ago

        Still doesn’t explain how public posts on a public, decentralized social media platform are implied to be “mine” or that I have any influence on the end use. It’s hosted on someone else’s computer from the get go, if anything the server owners are the content owners more than I am.

        Edit it’d be like if I started seeding a file on a torrent platform, then got upset when someone downloaded it.

        • ShortN0te@lemmy.ml
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          5 months ago

          I write a book that gets published. I still hold copyright over it even if it is in someone else’s bookshelf. What rights the copyright holder and the person has is regulated by law. For example a physical book can be resold or lent to someone else, but it is not allowed to copy it and sell the copies.

          I can cite text from the boom, that falls under fair use but I cannot use whole chapters in a derived work.

          I still hold copyright over my messages online, even when it is public or published, that is basic copyright law in most relevant legislations. If the training of an LLM and later selling access to the LLM with copyright infringed data is fair use is yet to be determined.

          • GBU_28@lemm.ee
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            5 months ago

            There is no copyright on publicly posted messages.

            Edit none that is durable

            • ShortN0te@lemmy.ml
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              5 months ago

              Sure there is, most messages are probably too short but in general yes. There is no difference to an online article.

              • GBU_28@lemm.ee
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                5 months ago

                There is no evidence you have any durable rights to your comments on Lemmy. It’s hosted on someone else’s machine and they have complete control.