Tag Archives: internet

IBM Took a Man’s Voice, Pitting Him Against His Own Work, While Companies Profit from Low-Effort Garbage Generated by Bots and “Self-Service”.

IBM Took a Man’s Voice, Pitting Him Against His Own Work, While Companies Profit from Low-Effort Garbage Generated by Bots and “Self-Service”.

The New York Times finally posted something [paywall] worth stopping and considering.

In 2003, a man named Greg Marston did some voice work for IBM.

He signed a contract “figuring they would be on the up and up”, and then 20 years later, they took his voice and used it to make “Connor”, a digital clone of his voice, as a product that they could sell, without paying Mr. Marston anything.

He came across “Connor” when he was watching Wimbledon (brought to you by IBM), and heard himself as the announcer. He was not amused.

He and his attorney are said to be “in contact” with IBM, and he says he knows that he has lost work due to this “digital clone” of his voice which was made without his consent.

The question to ponder here, is whether the practice should be legal at all.

If we assume that all a company like IBM has to do is arrange for ongoing royalties, then eventually they won’t need any voice actors.

Without any need for new voice actors, a job disappears. Eventually, the ones that agreed to the contracts will die and the royalties will go to their heirs, which never did any work at all.

Another part of the article that I enjoyed, is that apparently, now there is a Web site (or maybe an app?) called Boomy which lets people crank out a bunch of low effort music, perhaps too nice of a word, let’s say “content”. They like “content”.

They’re always looking to fill up “streaming” with “content” now, and it doesn’t matter if it’s any good or not. If it costs basically nothing to make and you can get some people to stream it, hey, it’s a big world and you’ll make some money.

Of course, this leads people to copy and paste this crap into Spotify, which I’ve read tries to prune some out, but only if they prove that other bots are “listening” to it (streaming it for just barely long enough to get “royalties”.

So, the “Dead Internet Theory” is continuing to prove itself.

You have a bunch of “Chaff Bots” making garbage for other bots to “stream” over and over again until Spotify realizes what’s happening and boots the “content” off, but there’s so many ways to game this system, right?

It’s basically just a high bandwidth version of, “have curl grab your Epinions articles on a loop as the pennies pile up”.

Spotify is very much a DotCom Era 2.0 product. How much Internet bandwidth is this using?

The music “industry” has hit rock bottom. There is literally no effort anymore. I actually listened to one of these “AI” tracks called “Heart on my Sleeve”, I think, last night, and it was so bad that I turned it off.

I mean, it wasn’t discernible from other “mumble rap assclowns” I guess, so they’ll lose their jobs first. You’ve gotta start somewhere.

The vegetables who create this “content” will lose their jobs and the vegetables who listen to it will keep clicking, along with the bots.

I’m glad that there was a lot of good music for hundreds of years before it stopped, all at once.

My spouse wonders why I listen to, almost exclusively, music from the 1950s through about 2000, and I guess he just doesn’t get the whole “golden era” thing. You know?

Everything had a “golden era”, and for animation, in the US, that was like when my grandparents were alive and in their 20s or 30s, and again in the 90s.

Movies? Used to go twice a week. Now we go twice a year.

They had to haul Hayao Miyazaki out of retirement to make one more to have something fit to go to the movie theater over.

Nobody will easily replace Hayao Miyazaki, or at least not a robot designed to run a “content farm”, which is what Netflix and Spotify have been for a while, but even those get worse.

As long as people keep “subscribing”, nobody at the company cares if the “content” is good. A while back, Netflix laid waste to their animators and said that there will be “robots” for this now too. It’s a very “corporate” product.

They have “algorithms” to read the audience and what they respond to, then they go back and have robots to draft scrips to show the audience things they liked before, over and over, and then yet more robots to animate it.

I am pretty sure that Japan will not go this route with its animation industry for a long time, if ever.

The movie theaters are dying.

Marcus Cinemas has switched to anime and sporting events because they can’t draw in ticket sales with Hollywood crap anymore. The writers may be on strike. Who cares?

Anime and sporting events are how you get people in who don’t want to see all this junk from Hollywood. Nobody wants to see that. The theaters know it. They built all these multi-plex cinemas they can’t fill (look at that graph) and now they need to find people who have money in their pockets.

The reason anime is taking over the theaters in the US is because the United States is a culture that is in terminal decline and cannot compete on quality.

The society in the United States accepts, all sorts of garbage. Not just culturally, but it’s depraved in almost every sense of the word. Criminality is tolerated. People openly flaunting their corruption. The country is finished. Tent cities? The politicians made everyone so selfish and jaded and high on themselves that nobody cares until it’s them.

Anyway, the movie theaters don’t even charge for tickets for the sports. Sports fans are the other demographic with money to spend. You go in there and they hope you buy twenty dollar popcorn, ten dollar Pepsi, and seven dollar hotdogs.

Worth a shot, for the theater owner. There are people who don’t want to burn to death in the sun watching a game. Have you ever tried to go see the Cubs at Wrigley Field? I’ve lived close enough for years and it’s absolute madness trying to get in there, and out.

That’s if you can get tickets. They have robots that buy all the tickets at the list price, naturally, and then they can sell them much much higher.

Nice big movie theater screen. Just pay for expensive snacks, which you’re going to do at the stadium.

Some say that a culture in decline excessively values entertainment.

Entertainment is always valued. When a culture is in decline, it will accept lower and lower standards of entertainment because the entertainment is a reflection of the culture.

I suppose the tl;dr version of this article is a depressing “shower thought”.

There’s never been more people in the world than there are now, and there’s never been less creativity in it.

We’re finally at the “Give up on life.” chapter of the species.

There’s really not a lot left to do on the Web.

The companies have turned it into a sky high garbage dump with bots, walled gardens, and DRM.

Every year, the legal landscape in the US gets worse as well, and then we export it through trade deals. They think that threatening everyone who is utterly broke will make them suddenly want this garbage they’re producing.

I refuse to participate in this race to the bottom with garbage written by robots, designed to be “consumed” by idiots.

I have the privilege of knowing what’s going on, and if we don’t ever get good original works out of the American entertainment industry again, well, it was nice while it lasted, but there will always be voice acting to dub over foreign stuff, or at least subtitles.

Ironically, the resistance to the “bot garbage” is coming from the US copyright and patent offices, which are normally the enemies of Freedom.

Which normally issue all sorts of bogus horseshit that people in the Free Software world are threatened by simply due to being less moneyed than the people who get the patents and copyrights.

Even the purveyors of this bot-generated smut and garbage are hitting a wall with the authorities because the law pretty clearly states that only a human being can “create” a work.

So, we can expect the purveyors of garbage to use the money they are obtaining by the imbeciles consuming crap to lobby to extend the laws to apply to low effort “content” generated by bots.

Whether they succeed or not is, at this point, unknowable, however it would be the worst thing to happen since the Digital Millennium Copyright Act.

One reason the music labels and Apple stopped “selling” music files that were yours to keep and pushed Apple Music is that eventually everyone who wants a copy of music, from when it was good, has one, and this market ultimately becomes self-limiting.

If you pay Apple $13 a month plus tax to keep listening to 70s/80s bands (80 cents per CD when bought 7 at a time at the thrift store), then you never own it, and the market is not self-limiting.

Meanwhile, your kids can listen to trash generated by robots.

If the United States public schools were interested in giving children educations befitting a human being instead of a head full of mush, we may never have reached this point. Every time we let rich billionaires “reform” the schools, the next generation comes out worse.

McDonalds doesn’t want to pay people to take orders.

So they have a “robot” to take your order now. A kiosk, which runs Windows, apparently.

This one has been broken for a few visits now. Apparently, Windows can’t handle “showing pictures of hamburgers for people to tap on”. Big surprise.

McDonalds punishes people who go to a register. You can’t use a coupon. You need the app or the kiosk for that. If you go to a human, they punish you with a 20% surcharge.

They portray this differently. They turn it around on you. If you use the app or the kiosk you get a 20% off coupon or occasionally a “free hamburger”.

It actually works out to what the price used to be before they fired people and forced you to do the unpaid work of navigating through an app or a kiosk to do the unpaid menial job of telling someone what you would like to eat and paying, and then sitting down.

Other companies, like Walmart, did these a long time ago. The customer gets no discount and has to do physical labor that a cashier used to be paid for.

The company is now finding out that shoplifting has gone through the roof due to self-checkout fraud. Some of it isn’t fraud, some is that the user didn’t scan something right and could be arrested anyway on the way out the door.

Richard Stallman has an easy solution to the “self-checkout” problem. He said when he goes to the grocery store he walks past them and mentions that people are doing free labor and taking a paying job away from someone.

The McDonalds/Walmart GULAG. One more way people are getting screwed with robots.

There are so many examples of how companies are using this stuff to offload work onto others and not paying them, that the only real value of all of this technology is stolen labor and unjust profits. We should reject the bots. Especially in the case of the supermarkets.

When I go to Jewel-Osco and check out, I have my digital coupons loaded and they work at a cashier register when I enter my “loyalty” number. I’m not wild about this. You used to just go in and get the sale price.

But it’s better than going to “self-check” and busting your ass bagging $300 worth of food while the thing goes “bonk bonk bonk please wait for assistance unexpected item in bagging area bonk bonk bonk”, and of course everyone else got that too so wait in line for your chance to pay after the other dozen people who got jammed up just trying to remove full bags when they ran out of room on the scale.

How long does it take me to bag and pay for these groceries?

Even at minimum wage, I would have made about $2-3.

If everyone in town uses them, this replaces at least two dozen full time jobs per store.

Instead, we have homeless, jobless, people living in tents.

“Internet Villain” Mozilla. Can Enough Really Be Said?

“Internet Villain” Mozilla (77 million lost users since January 2019), which actually attacked Richard Stallman publicly, as “all of Mozilla” (signature #35), on a petition of lies, bleeds users to Brave Browser and Mozilla’s forks.

So how is that working out for them?

After realizing that these petitions were a smear campaign organized by large tech firms and they had been used and now had publicly gone on record as Enemies of Free Software, some people un-signed the petition and then contacted Roy Schestowitz on trying to weasel their way out of copies of former revisions that had been shown on Techrights, citing their “privacy”.

Most of the signatories of the petition are companies working against Software Freedom, like “Internet Villain” Mozilla, which hires people straight out of Facebook and the Central Intelligence Agency, and gives Internet Privacy Awards to Comcast, one of the most notorious ISPs for many years, which even did such actions as NXDOMAIN (No Such Domain) hijackings of invalid Web sites to a Comcast page of ads, and Man-In-The-Middle) (MITM) attacks against unencrypted Web page loads to display messages and inject JavaScripts.

Mozilla also fills Firefox with trash and spyware and ads that drive their users away in droves.

I was noticing that Brave‘s Active Monthly Users was about 20 million before the “COVID lockdowns” and has worked its way up to almost 60 million. An increase of nearly 40 million. In the mean time, Mozilla has chased out 77 million monthly active users.

It seems that roughly 75% of the users that Mozilla has chased out have gone to Brave alone.

Brendan Eich is vindicated.

They forced him out of the CEO role at Mozilla so that the current CEO, Mitchell Baker, who is something of a “corporate arsonist” in my opinion, could ascend to CEO and fill Firefox with trash, DRM, and “Chrome-isms”. (Bad, oftentimes impossible-to-secure “features” of the Web Platform, dictated by Google.)

Now the people at Mozilla, (at least the ones that didn’t get sacked in the huge rounds of layoffs!) get to reap the rotten fruit of their coup against Eich.

Mozilla sacked 70 in the first round and 250 in the next, and that was just in 2020 alone.

Then what these places generally do next is go on hiring freezes and quit replacing people who leave. So there can be substantial further losses but the bad “news” stops getting published.

What we get is a Firefox that barely changes, except patches to deal with Windows spyware that crashes it and some Chromeisms, and more “parasite-ware” like “Firefox Suggest”, which is aggravating adware and a keylogger.

Mozilla, an enemy of Free Software, is clearly perishing, and Brendan Eich is well into the process of bringing the whole rotten temple down on top of them.

He is pushing back harder on the junk that Mozilla always ends up welcoming with open arms after some tepid disapproval that ultimately accomplishes nothing except feel good PR before they attack the Open Internet again.

Recently, Brave Software had this to say about Google’s WEI “proposal”.

Brave strongly opposes Google’s “Web Environment Integrity” (WEI) proposal. As with many of Google’s recent changes and proposals regarding the Web, “Web Environment Integrity” would move power away from users, and toward large websites, including the websites Google itself runs. Though Brave uses Chromium, Brave browsers do not (and will not) include WEI.1 Further, some browsers have introduced other features similar to, though more limited than, WEI (e.g., certain parts of WebAuthn and Privacy Keys); Brave is considering how to best restrict these features without breaking benign uses.

Google’s WEI proposal is frustrating, but it’s not surprising. WEI is simply the latest in Google’s ongoing efforts to prevent browser users from being in control of how they read, interact with, and use the Web. Google’s WebBundles proposal makes it more difficult for users to block or filter out unwanted page content, Google’s First Party Sets feature makes it more difficult for users to make decisions around which sites can track users, and Google’s weakening of browser extensions straightforwardly makes it harder for users to be in control of their Web experience by crippling top ad-and-tracker-blocking extensions such as uBlock Origin.2 This is unfortunately far from a complete list of recent, similar user-harming Web proposals from Google. Again, Brave disables or modifies all of these features in Brave’s browsers.

The Web is the world’s most popular, and therefore most important, open system for sharing information and distributing applications. It is critical that users stay in control of how they interact with the Web, and for the Web not to be reduced to a series of take-it-or-leave-it black-boxes that users can’t inspect, can’t understand, and can’t modify. Google’s WEI proposal (like many other Google proposals) intentionally shifts power away from users, and towards large websites and advertisers.

WEI is the latest step in a terrible direction Google is pushing for the Web. Web users deserve a browser that doesn’t treat them as enemies that need to be restricted and controlled.

“Web Environment Integrity”: Locking Down the Web, by Peter Snyder, VP of Privacy Engineering and Senior Privacy Researcher

When Brendan Eich commented directly,

We are a fork, have been all along, the “reskinned” claim is complete nonsense. We won’t be shipping WEI support, just as we disable or otherwise nullify lots of other junk that Google puts into Chromium.

Brendan Eich

Brave has done a lot of things for your privacy, including, recently, blocking sites from port-scanning you.

Malicious websites use all manner of tricks to worm their way into our systems, but in order for them to be most effective at their nastiness, they need to know what they’re facing. That often means scanning our phones and computers, looking for open network ports and identifying the programs running on them. The data that generates can effectively “fingerprint” your device, letting the malicious site identify and track you — even if you use a browser with safeguards like an ad-blocker. So far, your best protection has been to install a third-party browser extension that blocks local port scanning, but now the Brave browser is tackling this problem head-on, by preventing websites from scanning open ports on your device in the first place.

-Android Police

In what can only be described as a deliciously delusional case of irony, Mozilla recently announced that, while everyone is running for the “fire exits” to get away from Firefox, which is burning down due to the “corporate arsonist” and her minions, you may now “import your Chrome WebExtensions if you are switching from Google Chrome”.

That’s like the Titanic welcoming new passengers after it hit the iceberg.

As we used to say, ROFLCOPTER.

With 77 million lost Firefox users since January 2019, Eich got 75% and the other 25% went off to one of the half-dozen Firefox forks (including LibreWolf) that have been sanitized, purged of malicious software, or even to SeaMonkey, Vivaldi, or the “even-worse-than-firefox” Google Chrome.

Taking the Metra/South Shore Line train to the Indiana Dunes. The trains are great, the apps are not. Apps suck and T-Mobile makes them suck worse.

Since when did buying train tickets require apps?

Metra, the commuter rail for the Chicago region, has chosen to have a $10 all day pass that you can only buy on an app, but at least the Ventra app works.

When it came time to switch to the South Shore Line (Indiana) train, their app was a total mess. Right off the bat, there’s tons of 1 star reviews in the Play Store about the app eating people’s money and not giving them a working ticket. When I tried to put it on my phone to just check the schedule, it couldn’t load the schedules.

Fortunately, the South Shore Line has ticket vending machines, so the stupid app not working is not a big problem. In fact, the ticket machines are something that could have been implemented with technology from decades ago, before we even had phones. They take cash or credit, and you tell them what stop you’re getting on at, and getting off at, and provide payment. That’s it. No crashing. No eating your money. No “Oh, my data doesn’t work here and I have to buy another ticket after making the conductor angry at me.”.

It’s hard to imagine how everyone went crazy and wanted a $1,749 iPhone that makes a mess when all you had to do was use a vending machine and put the tickets in your wallet.

But then again, it’s also hard to imagine a “free” country where people lost control of their government to big auto and oil companies who waged a mostly successful war against public transit, roasted the planet with cars, got everyone in traffic jams wasting all their money on the cars, gas, insurance, and mechanics bills, after shutting down the inter-urbans.

Trains are one of the least carbon-intensive methods to travel, but America funds them badly, and it’s such a shame, because with rising gas prices, a new car shortage, and right to repair your car under attack, along with the impending climate crisis, we’ve needed this more than ever before, and we had it and were foolish enough to let them shut most of it down.

If you’re lucky enough that you can put the numbers into your calculator, trains vs. driving, trains win over long distances every time. Gas aside, you’re beating up your car, in my case I pay per mile for insurance (metromile), you hit regularly scheduled maintenance like oil changes faster, and then there’s traffic jams, car crashes, and police sitting there waiting for a speeder so they can make more money for the government in fines.

Another problem with apps, is that everyone wants you to use them for everything, as if they worked all the time.

T-Mobile sucks big fat floppy donkey dick in most of Illinois now that they’ve pretty openly sabotaged my Sprint phone with the supposed “T-Mobile Network Experience” SIM card. The phone that they sold me, brand new, for $400 last year. It’s been getting so bad that when I walk through Walmart, I have to have written down the aisles that everything I want are on, on a piece of paper, with a pen, before I go into the store. When I go into the store, my phone stops working entirely except that it can still make phone calls, unless you walk into the frozen food department.

T-Mobile wants me to upgrade to a phone that doesn’t actually exist, and would theoretically offer me a bill credit to offset it, if they in fact had it, which they don’t. I wrote about that the other day. So right now, I’m stuck with the piece of shit because I don’t want to go through the hassle of replacing a phone that’s less than a year old.

So when I want food, and there’s an app, I also ignore the app. Because T-Mobile makes it impossible to get a reliable enough signal to bring up my coupons or order before I get to the restaurant.

(Wendy’s has coupons, but when I tried to use one to get a free 4 piece chicken nuggets the other day, T-Mobile made the piece of shit lose data and malfunction, and then the piece of shit app crashed, and then the manager made a snide remark like I was in there trying to knock over his restaurant for a dollar’s worth of chicken nuggets.)

But they still expect to be paid every month.

And if they had the phone they don’t have, with the bill credit that can’t be used on one they have, and I did upgrade to it, I’d lose my Sprint plans and pay 33% more money for a Magenta Plan.

The customer support at T-Mobile is outsourced to the Philippines, and they don’t give the agents the authority to do anything to make your phone work. The people in the store have the attitude “buy another phone and hope for the best…..or leave so we can turn our attention to someone who is buying a new phone today”. The entire T-Mobile experience sucks. And I mean they suck worse than Sprint ever did.

Maybe that’s why they had to grease the wheels for the merger by spending the $200,000 at Donald Trump’s hotel while he was still in office. (The entire presidency was a grift.)

Now I have a smartphone and still have to do many things with MP3 files and vending machines because it doesn’t work because it’s on T-Mobile.

In Trump’s America, T-Mobile switches to you. And then has a data breach and spills your Social Security Number, and kills your phone deader than a can of SPAM.

Their home internet isn’t as bad. It’s a little twitchy, but if I put it in the right spot in my window and face it just so, it’s at least no worse than Comcast, and my landlord can’t run it over with a weed whacker.