Giuseppe Mazzapica

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219 Following
1.8K Posts

Captivated by WordPress development during his architecture studies, Giuseppe couldn't escape the web dev industry for the next two decades.

WP expert and eager open source contributor, he used to say he spoke PHP better than English.

Despite his undiminished interest in software development and architecture, his job has lately been more about engineering leadership and strategy than code.

These days, he's struggling more with the "socio-" part of his socio-technical job.

Homehttps://gmazzap.me
WorkDirector of Engineering at https://syde.com
GitHubhttps://github.com/gmazzap
PronounsHe/Him/His
A man used LLMs to generate hundreds of thousands of "songs", then used bots to stream them billions of times, to collect $8m in royalties. https://www.justice.gov/usao-sdny/pr/north-carolina-man-pleads-guilty-music-streaming-fraud-aided-artificial-intelligence-0 Is there a better metaphor for late-stage capitalism than burning resources to make songs that are never listened to, then steaming them to robots that will never hear them, ad infinitum?

I've published a new blog post: "Human Creations", on the difference in content generation by LLMs, and the creation of text, art and code by humans.

You can find it at https://derickrethans.nl/human-creations.html or at @blog

#writing #ai #content #fediverse #MadeByHumans

Human Creations — Derick Rethans

🔔 #PHP object-mapper library Valinor v2.4.0 released!

🚀 This huge release brings exciting new features:

- Out of the box HTTP request mapping
- Mapper/normalizer configurators
- CamelCase/snake_case keys conversion
- Keys case restriction

https://github.com/CuyZ/Valinor/releases/tag/2.4.0

⤵️ see below for more details ⤵️

Human Creations
Original Post

Last year I wrote about how you can use ActivityPub, through the Fediverse to publish your own content, and being in control of it.

As part of a recent keynote that I gave at the Dutch PHP Conference I returned to this subject, but also reflected on what happens with the content you publish, and your rights over it.

Because in the last year, it has become clear, that lots of large and wealthy companies, don't really care about the latter.

What I mean by this becomes clear with the following examples.

When Gary Gale one day went to visit his Vaguely Rude Places Map site, he found that (AI) bots had eaten through his map tile allowance. He now hosts his site behind Cloudflare, being beholded to a Big Tech™ company again.

When I look at the web server logs for the php.net sites, I see that most of the uncached requests come from bots.

This also happens to other large sites, such as OpenStreetMap, which got hit by AI DDos Scraper Bots requesting an extreme amount of content from 100,000+ IP addresses; or Fediverse instances, such as infosec.exchange, which had to deal with more load.

All this scraping comes at a cost, but to the scrapers, nor the users of these tools.

Although the content is freely available, the services hosting content still need to be funded. Instead of you giving up your privacy, you will need to pay for those with actual money for them to thrive, and exist.

But AI impacts content in other ways as well.

I need to be clear of what I mean with AI. I don't mean the visual recognition models to detect cancer faster, sifting through loads of data to find patterns, fraud detection, speech recognition, translation services, or deciphering my terrible handwriting.

I specifically mean Generative AI through LLMs — for articles, source code, and "art".

I have no beef with the actual technology either, only the exploitative nature of how these currently are created and hyped up.

Just like the Luddites weren't against new technology, but how this technology was used to exploit them.

I have written two books in my life, many years ago. The material in them has been slurped up into the LLMs, and one of them was originally part of the Anthropic law suit where they settled for using pirated copies of the books.

Mind you, not for using the book as training material.

Although the settlement was for 1.5 billion dollars, I still ended up getting nothing, as only American authors were compensated.

There are similarities with the code that I, and many others, have written.

Code, published under an open license. But these licenses often require attribution. How much attribution is now given when one of your chat bots produces parts of my code?

Nothing.

Which means that these tools are in breach of the licences under which the original code was published, and hence shouldn't exist.

Unfortunately, some governments, like mine in the UK, are less concerned about AI companies stealing content, although there are some indications that they've changed their tune.

I never gave permission for any of my content, be it books, code, nor photos, to be used by these tools, but they're still making money of it.

As a matter of fact, they are not only making money of it, but also making it a lot harder to host things ourselves by driving up costs for CPUs, GPUs, memory, and storage.

They are literally stealing things to sell back to us, whilst at the same time making sure we have to use their services as it is becoming too costly to have a decent set up in our homes and offices.

But lets get back to content. I like writing. I am not great at it, but I find it pleasing to show others what I have worked on, and the adventures I have had.

I write for humans, and therefore, I also expect that when I read something, it is also written by humans. I prefer to be able to see the writing style of specific authors, as that is part of the experience. They own their voice.

In my case, that has always been including em-dashes wherever I can.

What I do not like to read is generic and bland text. Text that has no weird grammarisms, flair, or emotions.

That is text that comes out of LLMs: Generic slop.

I feel the same about AI "Art".

Over-polished generic images and logos, that you see more and more on signs in front of shops, the Web, and in presentations at conferences.

Not only do I find them boring, it is also taking work away from actual artists. I thought that computers were around to do the boring monotonous work?

This cartoon, by Tjeerd Royaards, nails it on the head.

Unlike AI companies slurping up all content on the Internet, I asked the author for permission to include this into my presentation.

He said . — "I don't allow the free use of my work, as I depend on my drawing to make a living"

So I went and purchased a digital license.

And this makes perfect sense.

Quality content created by artists, authors, and software professionals is worth something important. And these creators need to be rewarded for their creative work.

Unlike the AI slop generators, I value : Writing, photos, images, and source code.

Human Creations — Derick Rethans

I have an idea, hear me out: Instead of letting Elon Musk launch 1,000,000 data centres into orbit, why don’t we launch Elon Musk into orbit as a warning to all the other Bond-villain billionaires in the world.
Yay!
Nay!
Poll ends at .

They are banning books in addition to banning the web because they want to prevent children from coming into contact with ideas.

I am older than the www, I lived in an underdeveloped country, didn't get a computer until I was 14. Libraries were my window into the world. I became a member of the adult library aged 11 because there was not much to read in the children's library. My mother tried to keep me away from the library after I showed her Cosmos by Carl Sagan and said: "See, this book also says that god does not exist, it is not just me".

That's why to this day I have a thing for libraries. We have to make sure they are preserved, because the web surely won't be.

https://hsnl.social/@Dany/116271552680700342

Dany :verified_gay: (@[email protected])

A British school library banned around 200 books deemed inappropriate. Including books about totalitarianism, toxic masculinity and books aimed at queer teenagers. This is a worrying move, and extra worrying is the use of AI to classify the books. It demonstrates the Bias as a Service that is inherently part of what AI is. https://www.indexoncensorship.org/2026/03/school-book-banning-escalates-in-the-uk-as-greater-manchester-secondary-school-censors-scores-of-books/

HSNL Social
Do I know anyone who has a Global Talent UK visa?

This post on AI and its impact on human creativity and dignity by @derickr is perfect.

No notes.

https://derickrethans.nl/human-creations.html

Human Creations — Derick Rethans

Bad news 😔💔

I am sad to announce today that unfortunately I will not be working with Privacy Guides anymore after the end of this month.

Good news! 🚨  

I will be available for a new position or contract, starting in April!

I am looking for a position or contact for:

✊ Digital rights activist (with a specialty in privacy rights)

🔒 Privacy expert or consultant

 Fediverse and Mastodon advocate

🙌 Managerial position

📰 Tech journalist

💻 Technical writer

💚 Or any other fitting positions

I am especially interested in working with nonprofit organisations, cooperatives, open-source projects, privacy-oriented software companies, or any other organisations working for the public good.

🇨🇦 Remote from Canada

 All the work I produce is guaranteed to be AI-free

Let me know if you hear of any good opportunities!

#FediHire #GetFediHired #Tech #Jobs

Hey. Hey guess what. Guess what day it is? It's our birthday, and the Vagina Museum is nine years old today. The world has changed massively in those nine years. We started out with a tweet... and now we're a vibrant community space, dedicated to education and celebration!