I am pretty sure they do, this data is just too valuable. At least meta admitted using a dataset called "books3" which contains ~200k pirated ebooks for llama 1 and 2 [1]. Anna's archive provides datasets for LLM…
Related: Royal Navy says quantum navigation test a success https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=36222625 Instead of gps, submarines can use maps of the gravitational constant for navigation
If you lose something, you always find it in the last place you search... because why would you keep searching after you found it
Australian parody news site the chaser just announced [1] that they are going to put up a paywall to avoid having their content scraped for AI training. They feel like chatGPT already "is a more competent writer of…
Maybe using ultrasonic testing during the printing process, while the inner parts are still accessible
I haven't seen anything like it in Europe either. Helsinki's library is incredible. It's also architecturally one of the most prominent buildings and right next to the parliament. It doesn't have a lot of books, though…
This was developed by HN user riskable and recently mentioned here: The obsessive pleasures of mechanical-keyboard tinkerers - https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=32623908
I am pretty sure they do, this data is just too valuable. At least meta admitted using a dataset called "books3" which contains ~200k pirated ebooks for llama 1 and 2 [1]. Anna's archive provides datasets for LLM…
Related: Royal Navy says quantum navigation test a success https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=36222625 Instead of gps, submarines can use maps of the gravitational constant for navigation
If you lose something, you always find it in the last place you search... because why would you keep searching after you found it
Australian parody news site the chaser just announced [1] that they are going to put up a paywall to avoid having their content scraped for AI training. They feel like chatGPT already "is a more competent writer of…
Maybe using ultrasonic testing during the printing process, while the inner parts are still accessible
I haven't seen anything like it in Europe either. Helsinki's library is incredible. It's also architecturally one of the most prominent buildings and right next to the parliament. It doesn't have a lot of books, though…
This was developed by HN user riskable and recently mentioned here: The obsessive pleasures of mechanical-keyboard tinkerers - https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=32623908