https://audiopea.com - Inspired by photopea, I'm building an online audio editor. Trying to do everything myself and make it all run on the client.
Not too far along, but I plan on continue hammering at it...
Yes. YouTube kids in my experience wasn't enough - I didn't like the fact that it had recommendations of more videos to watch on the side, which allowed kids to move to another video every 10 seconds. Also, you need to manually block channels you don't like, so you keep discovering more channels when they've already watched them and it's too late.
I don't think GPL licenses really stop companies from scraping the code and using it to train their LLM's. Also, how would you prove they actually used your code ?
Nothing. You protect yourself with hiding your code away from Github. Anyway, when software will be produced WITH LLMs, that will inevitably repeat your code, then you will sue.
Opensource is MADE to be copied. It's meant to be. You WANT it. You just want it to benefit EVERYONE and not corporations who make money out of it, and there are defenses to that.
Opensource, free software, is a philosophy, not a business opportunity per se. Business is just tangential to it.
I strongly agree. LLM’s have eviscerated the core idea and motivation behind using the GPL, in a way I didn’t at all see coming. We’ve published a lot of very unique GPL code (eg in sagemath), which anybody can now easily “regenerate” as part of some other closed (or open) software using an LLM. They wouldn’t even know they are creating a derived work of our GPL code. I have had to come to terms with this...
I don't think this is as clear as you say it is. If a person "regenerates" GPL code from memory, it will still be a copyright violation. LLMs can't own copyright on their own, so a person must be responsible for the result. So it should be a violation. GPL should help (if you actually sue).
Yeah, I'm aware, but didn't bother yet to go further... I have been thinking about hosting my own git server to work on.
I'm not a prolific open source contributor anyways, but i'm wondering if the tides are changing in regards to open source.
I can imaging that many people in the open source community - even if they're giving away their code for free under the most permissive licenses, still somewhere enjoy the fact that people know they're looking at their code on github or wherever it may be hosted.
But now that slowly people shifting to only looking at code via LLM chat apps, then they might want to contirbute less to open source... just wondering... ?
I've read a few books on parenting, various online articles and was also at some short seminars. My experience is very similar to yours in that when the people writing/teaching were just basing their knowledge on opinions or trends I feel like it was usually bad advice. When I read a book or article coming from people that worked in the field as developmental psychologists or experienced and well-educated social workers I felt the advice given was much, much better.
That was the point of my question - trying to find resources that come from reputable people.
I feel like it's very hard to find 'the good stuff'..
Regarding your point on seeking experts advice - I totally agree. I'm no stranger to the idea, and have been to psychologists quite a few times throughout the years. I'm definitely not against it, and when I'll run into difficult situations i'll definitely take that as an option as well.
I was hoping to find sources of good advice for the day-to-day stuff that all parents deal with.
I feel that's a little like saying 'Everyone is unique, so psychologists are useless'.. Although everyone IS truly unique, there are still common patterns that emerge, and many commonalities in our upbringings.
We don't act completely randomly, not as children and definitely not as adults. We exist within a common environment with a common set of laws or norms that most people live by (excluding extreme cases, for various reasons).
btw - I like the article you shared here, and would love to find more sources of information like that.
Specifically regarding potty training and diapers though - I've heard that before (don't remember where), but since diaper money isn't a big issue for me, I would rather go with more 'modern' diapers and have the convenience that comes with that over cotton diapers (or no diapers at all) and have my kids potty trained earlier.
But it's still very interesting and important to know the story behind it.
Maybe I should've added some more details, but I'm also interested in general.
For me, I have 2 kids, one is 7 years old and the other 1 year old.
I know reading peer-reviewed papers would be very difficult, and I don't plan on reading a ton of research papers, but there is so much information out there from people that aren't educated or in a position to give out information..
I would like to know where I can read opinions from well known psychologists perhaps or other professionals that read and rely on peer-reviewed papers.
What I have in mind is something like how Andrew Huberman (the podcast HubermanLab) talks about various subjects and gives advice on certain health topics, while referencing research papers and studies on the subject, but on subjects related to parenting.
Some of the subjects that interest me are: suggested nutrition for young kids, how to develop healthy sleep habbits, toys and games that have healthy developmental impact on kids, effective punishments/rewards systems, good sources and ways to teach kids math/science/physics, effective ways to deal with ADHD, and more..
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