Big Tech’s desperate last push at AI regulation
… Broadly speaking, to win Davis’ approval, preemption law should meaningfully protect a set of values Davis called the “Four Cs”: children, conservatives, creators, and communities. …
… Broadly speaking, to win Davis’ approval, preemption law should meaningfully protect a set of values Davis called the “Four Cs”: children, conservatives, creators, and communities. …
… Our product strategy is to help creators do their taxes and clean their toilet using AI, but we’re not going out and saying, “We’re Patreon.ai now, and everything is going to be an AI feature.” I’ve explained all this to our creators in this very long 45-minute video, and I think for the most part,… …
… As a former freelance artist, I’m not here to judge David Szauder for his process — which, again, seems far more involved than the average AI image creator’s. …
… The actual mechanism for control is vague and remains undetermined.” Other makers worry applying this form of “censorware” to printers could dissuade future creators from experimenting with the tech for fear of breaking a law. …
… Creators are different people. …
… So there’s just a lot to talk about there in the creator economy and where AI is supposed to go and how it’s supposed to work. …
… There’s a lot of controversy. There’s a lawsuit next to this decision. Explain that decision. You’re like, “This is the policy and it’s going to lead to some controversy.” How did you decide, “Okay, we’re going to hold to it?” That policy is really about protecting transparency. …