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Joined 2 years ago
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Cake day: December 18th, 2023

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  • As you can tell from the previous answers: It depends.

    The bigger an LLM is, the more power it uses. AI models can be quantized or distilled to yield smaller but less capable models. Providers may try to route you to the cheapest model that can handle your prompt.

    Another question is the length of the output. The length of the input matters less but might be relevant for processing long texts.

    The energy used for training is relatively insignificant once you average it over its lifetime. The energy efficiency of a particular data center will certainly matter more.

    Providers like OpenAI claim that the typical query uses about 0.3Wh. That’s about the same as an idling phone charger uses in an hour; ie charger plugged into the outlet but not into the phone.






  • The background is that French law requires ISPs to retain the IPs of their customer for some time. That way, an IP address can be associated with a customer.

    If I download music in a Starbucks, can they fine the Starbucks CEO then?

    A CEO is an employee. You generally can’t sue employees for this sort of thing. It may be possible to sue the company as a whole for enabling the copyright infringement, but that’s not to do with this case. Perhaps in the future, operators of WiFi-hotspots will be required to use something like Youtube’s Content ID system.

    Anyway I hope I hope online artists, and authors are able to use this to sue AI companies for stealing their copyrighted works.

    They can use this to go after “pirates”. It’s got nothing to do with AI.





  • Allowing Ai to train for free is a direct threat towards creatives

    No. Many creatives fear that AI allows anyone to do what they do, lowering the skill premium they can charge. That doesn’t depend on free training.

    Some seem to feel that paying for training will delay AI deployment for some years, allowing the good times to continue (until they retire or die?)

    But afterward, you have to ask who’s paying for the extra cost when AI is a normal tool for creatives? Where does the money come from to pay the rent to property owners? Obviously the general public will pay a part through higher prices. But I think creatives may bear the brunt, because it’s the tools of their trade that are more expensive and I don’t think all of that cost can be passed on.