At right: Popular Fortnite Creative maps featuring Sponge Bob, Shrek, Minecraft without authorization
Mackenzie Jackson, who leads a top Fortnite Creative development studio that's created Fortnite deployments for Doritos and other top brands, recently posted this viral rant about how companies like hers are having to compete against Creative maps with rampant IP violations. Pleading directly to Epic CEO Tim Sweeney:
We deserve better that this. @TimSweeneyEpic I appreciate the world you have given us with Fortnite. I hold it so close to my heart, but I can’t keep silent on this stuff socially. Internal reporting isn’t working so I’m going public. You take to twitter to advocate for all the wrongdoings of Apple etc. I’m asking you to hear us out too.
Only about 5% of Creative maps include IP violations, MackJack estimates. The problem is that they're unfairly pulling players away from professional studios like hers, and there's no way for them to do anything about it:
"Apparently they will only be removed if the owner of the IP reports it with Epic. Epic wont take any action otherwise," as she puts it to in Discord. "Which just means for those creators following rules and not wanting to risk their reputation they will always be competing against the islands breaking the rules.
"To be candid about it, it has affected my companies finances to the point where it is worth my time to try to reach out to the IPs myself and try to get them to report with Epic. The IP [violating] games are essentially clickbait that is working--driving a high percentage of our player base to maps that are breaking TOS, we are all competing for shares of the engagement. Our maps dropped out of discovery due to it. Effectively killing our player base and our engagement revenue takes an astronomical hit."
Her tweet has been viewed over 100,000 times, pointing from her perspective to a groundswell of anger among Creative developers like her.
"I can assure you that every dev team has complained at least once," she tells me, laughing without mirth. "Every creator I have talked to is reporting these islands. I just wanted Tim Sweeney to see the communities frustration around it. He tweets about Apple and all those injustices [with App Store fees/policies] and I need him to see his community and do better."
I've reached out to Epic about this and will post any reply I get here. My guess is Epic's hands are somewhat tied by lthe "safe harbor" provision of the US copyright law, but IANAL. I am surprised obvious potential IP violations aren't flagged before a map is published.
Anyway, read MackJack's original tweet below:
Wonderful: ChatGPT Apparently Improves My Blog's Comment Spam!
One super-fun Monday activity i have is going through this blog's comment filter to confirm the nuking of apparent comment Spam. For the longest time (like the last 15 years), it's been quick and easy to spot the Spam comment, which is totally off-topic promotions with a link to a commerce/scam sites. In a recent innovation in Spam comments, a bot apparently mixes up the Spam text with garbled excerpts from the individual post, so it takes a bit more time to identify it as Spam.
Now, evidently thanks to ChatGPT and other Large Language Models, blog comment Spam has taken a great leap in quality!
Pictured at right are a couple recent Spam comments, similar to several others that have been popping up on New World Notes recently. Unlike the Spam of the past, the comments are actually on topic to the specific post, and grammatically correct. (If totally bland.)
It's only when you check the commenter's URL do you realize it's a Spam bot promoting gift cards and obscure software or whatever. (Don't bother looking for the actual comments, they've already been nuked.) Ironically, many of these Spam comments generated by AI are attached to posts about AI.
So that's wonderful! It's great getting to waste an extra 5 minutes a week on comment moderation, so thanks for that, OpenAI.
There are some broader implications here:
Continue reading "Wonderful: ChatGPT Apparently Improves My Blog's Comment Spam!" »
Posted on Monday, July 24, 2023 at 02:34 PM in AI, Comment of the Week | Permalink | Comments (1)
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