Does warmer mean temperature? Color? Something else?

    • TWeaK
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      31 year ago

      The service is free to use. My access to it is not conditional to my authentic participation in unpaid labor, and nor is it equivalent.

      Personal data has value. Thought has value. Commercial enterprises like this attempt to suppress that value, while simultaneously using it to position themselves amongst the wealthiest businesses in the world. They should pay us for our data.

      What they do is akin to a car manufacturer saying they shouldn’t pay the person who makes nuts and bolts, because nuts and bolts have far less value than a car, and the people who make nuts and bolts do not know how to build a car. This is would be a ridiculous scenario; it is also ridiculous that users aren’t paid fairly for their data.

      If people were paid fairly for their data, then these businesses would have no scope to raise the price of their product in line with this new (fair) material cost. This is because the cost of their product is already an exaggeration of the value they provide. They sell their product for more than it’s worth, meanwhile they pay their data suppliers (every single human being) nothing. Of course they don’t want you to realise the value they’re taking, doing so could only reduce their profits.

      • @Zoboomafoo@lemmy.world
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        11 year ago

        The service is free to use

        No it isn’t.

        My access to it is not conditional to my authentic participation in unpaid labor

        Yes it is, and you’re being paid by access.

        Is paying in labor instead of money such an alien concept to you?

        • TWeaK
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          11 year ago

          That isn’t the deal as described in the contract. That is how they try to frame the deal after the fact, to convince people to let them get away with it.

          The site is free to access. While you access it, they claim rights to your data, or in this case the output of your work. It is not an exchange of access for data/labor, it is a free provision with terms snuck in via the fine print.

          • @Zoboomafoo@lemmy.world
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            1 year ago

            It’s really not that complicated. If you don’t want to pay to use a service, that’s your perogative, but it’s not a deceptive trade at all.

            The website gets to avoid bots spamming forms, you get access to the forms, and Captcha gets some training data. Everyone benefits

            • TWeaK
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              11 year ago

              It absolutely is deceptive. The captcha does not openly tell the user “if you complete this you’re going to train an AI system for us which we will eventually sell for profit”. The user is merely told to “prove that you’re human”. The terms and conditions or privacy policy also don’t spell things out in plain English, it’s all generalised statements meant to disguise what they’re doing.

              It’s also not true that everyone benefits. The user is supposed to gain access to the website for free - the website wants users to visit. However, the website wants to prevent non-user bots from accessing the website. Instead of the website paying for a service to prevent bots and taking that as part of their overhead costs, the website is getting the user to provide unpaid labor to pay a third party for the service that the website wants. The service gets a benefit, the website doesn’t have to pay, the user has to do all the work with no fair reward.

              If it was literally just proving the user was human, that would be different. These systems extract further value from the user, for which the user is not compensated.

              It might only be a small thing, a few pennies here and there, but they’re stealing pennies from everyone.