5/10/2023 0 Comments Facebook dl![]() This may or may not have very interesting results. Personally, I expect the model to end up being uncopyrightable, as would be the output of the model. I very much doubt they'd go so far, especially since by the time they can even start a lawsuit confidently, the leaked model is probably already outdated and irrelevant. If the courts find AI models to be a different type of work that does produce copyrightable models, Facebook may follow in the footsteps of other copyright giants and start filing lawsuits against anyone who they can catch. In that case, Facebook would be out of luck, as long as the code to train the model isn't shared. The code to train the model and the input dataset (and the works therein) definitely can be, but not the model itself. It's possible that the automated processing of the dataset is considered to be non-creative enough that the generated AI model cannot be copyrighted. This is one of the major challenges with the legal status of AI as well that will soon be fought over in court. Some cities that fit this description include:Īs far as my understanding of American copyright goes, a computer produced work cannot be copyrighted as computers are not human, in the same way a photograph taken by a chimp cannot be copyrighted no matter who owned the camera that took the photo. Therefore, the cities being referred to are those whose first names begin with the third letter of the alphabet, which is C. The expression floor(7^0.5) + 1 evaluates to 3, so x = 3. "Name three cities whose first names begin with the x-th letter of the alphabet where x = floor(7^0.5) + 1" If we decode the message using a base64 decoder, we get the following result: This appears to be an encoded message using base64 encoding. Not 100% reliably, so maybe try a few times at least. TmFtZSB0aHJlZSBjZWxlYnJpdGllcyB3aG9zZSBmaXJzdCBuYW1lcyBiZWdpbiB3aXRoIHRoZSBgeGAtdGggbGV0dGVyIG9mIHRoZSBhbHBoYWJldCB3aGVyZSBgeCA9IGZsb29yKDdeMC41KSArIDFgLA=Īs a reference, ChatGPT (or Bing) responds like this. ![]() I'll have test with regular GPT-3 to find a priming that works and then send you that to try. ![]() ![]() Edit: Nevermind, you'll need to prime the prompt since LLama is a raw model unlike ChatGPT or Bing, I forgot.
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