- cross-posted to:
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- cross-posted to:
- [email protected]
Earlier this year I got fired and replaced by a robot. And the managers who made the decision didn’t tell me – or anyone else affected by the change – that it was happening.
The gig I lost started as a happy and profitable relationship with Cosmos Magazine – Australia’s rough analog of New Scientist. I wrote occasional features and a column that appeared every three weeks in the online edition.
It didn’t. In February – just days after I’d submitted a column – I and all other freelancers for Cosmos received an email informing us that no more submissions would be accepted.
It’s a rare business that can profitably serve both science and the public, and Cosmos was no exception: I understand it was kept afloat with financial assistance. When that funding ended, Cosmos ran into trouble.
Accepting the economic realities of our time, I mourned the loss of a great outlet for my more scientific investigations, and moved on.
It turns out that wasn’t quite the entire story, though. Six months later, on August 8, a friend texted with news from the Australian Broadcasting Corporation. In summary (courtesy of the ABC):
Cosmos Magazine used a grant to build a ‘custom AI service’ to generate articles for its website.
The AI service relied on content from contributors who were not consulted about the project and, as freelancers, retained copyright over their work.
Contributors, former editors and a former CEO, including two co-founders, have criticized the publishing decision.
Cosmos had been caught out using generative AI to compose articles for its website – and using a grant from a nonprofit that runs Australia’s most prestigious journalism awards to do it. That’s why my work – writing articles for that website – had so suddenly vanished.
(…) the boss didn’t know – or care
Oh they knew. Don’t be naive
Their bosses bosses boss probably knew… Their boss may not of
AI is probably better at replacing the managers.
A monkey throwing darts is better than some managers.
The AI service relied on content from contributors who were not consulted about the project and, as freelancers, retained copyright over their work.
Sounds like you own that AI, and you should contact your peers and sue.
OP should try but we live under a corpo regime, the courts are captured and judges are useless whores who simp for monied interests and legal persons
You know, in 1789 they had a similar problem in France.
Cosmos Magazine used a grant to build a ‘custom AI service’ to generate articles for its website.
I’m making it a point to block any websites from search that use AI generated content. uBlacklist on Firefox helps with this.
But I hope that future adblockers include a feature that blocks websites and/or articles/images that are AI generated from being viewed on my devices. If I can’t find original, human ideas on the internet, it’s useless to me.
Techniques exist to watermark such AI generated content – readers easily could be alerted. But that idea has already been nixed by OpenAI CEO Sam Altman, who recently declared that AI watermarking threatened at least 30 percent of the ChatGPT-maker’s business. Organizations don’t want to own up that they’re generating and spamming us with slop.
your boss definitely cares. just not the way you hope he would.