grayestofghosts: Elliot Alderson with the word hackerman superimposed (hackerman)
I have been messing around with the Innioasis y1 and while it's definitely got bugs I have been enjoying using it and have been generally filling it with lots of stuff. So, instead of keeping everything to myself, I'm sharing these:

Listen Notes is one of the few podcast streaming websites I've been able to find that still has an audio download link on every podcast and does not take you to an app (Podbean does this for most but not some -- I have not found any feeds that do not link to actual mp3 files on Listen Notes yet). So, if you're using an mp3 player without apps, this is a good choice to download your podcasts from. I generally use Swinsian (not free) to clean up the metadata before I upload it but that's definitely not strictly necessary.

The Current radio station allows free downloads of The Song Of The Day going back five days. A long time ago iTunes used to have this feature, where they had a free to download song every day, so this is similar. The Current is an alternative station but they're pretty eclectic so it's worth checking out even if alternative specifically isn't your jam.

And a pay-what-you-want album, Blank Banshee 0 by Blank Banshee, which has been in my heavy rotation for me for a while, though may partly be because it comes up early in the album listing, haha. It's considered pretty foundational vaporwave with other influences. I had the surreal experience a few nights ago listening to a song on the radio that was very clearly sampled in here.
grayestofghosts: a sketch of a man reading a paper (reading)
I should probably get into what books I've been reading (I have been reading, just not posting about it), and getting more into The Locked Tomb fandom. And I've found a podcast that did a read on Gideon the Ninth, Frontline Fifth, and they're going to start reading Harrow soon. I have a feeling this is slightly less brainrotting than my usual podcast fare so that's something.

I'm still alive, and stuff has been rough. Hopefully I'll get back to posting here more.

Hashtags

Aug. 5th, 2024 08:25 pm
grayestofghosts: (percy)
I was listening to one of my trashy true crime podcasts and it was talking about how a college campus had a hastag for a missing student trending and I'm just thinking, wow, I have no idea how I would even get "word out" or really "word in" these days. It feels like with Twitter so broken, with Tiktok being terrible and the "hot new thing", with Bluesky being so esoteric in comparison, Facebook being not worth looking at even if you technically have an account, Reddit and Tumblr being, well, Reddit and Tumblr... the social media landscape has really changed a lot. It definitely feels like something that we had has been destroyed, the whole 'main square' bit of the internet that we used to have. Or perhaps I just do not feel very engaged with what's there anymore. Maybe I'm just getting old.
grayestofghosts: (percy)
A very interesting episode of the podcast Hooked On Pop came out last week called Invasion of the Vibesnatchers which seemed particularly relevant to my piece on AI art generators as potential IP laundering machines. It's a very, very interesting comparison on how two similar phenomena are being dealt with in two different mediums and how, with both of them, the artists seems to lose.

Most people are not familiar with how music credits and pay works. Various methods of what might be called 'collageing' have been used in popular recorded music since forever -- from literal clips being 'sampled' and used in a new way in a new song, or melodies repeated and reinterpreted and on and on. Also, in the United States, there's a very defined structure of who owns music, and therefore who gets money every time a song is played, so when pieces of a song are used in another song who gets a cut and how is very predetermined. Because of this structure of the business, nobody wants to step on anyone else's toes too badly, so often credit will be pre-emptively awarded before there's any kind of conflict leading to lawsuit if a company thinks there might be an issue. All of this is happening under the listener's nose unless they really look for these credits. Actual disputes like over Robin Thicke's "Blurred Lines" are not common and when they do happen they're usually settled pretty quickly.

Now, an "interpolation" isn't as straightforward a copy as a sampled clip or a repeated line of melody. The example analyzed at the beginning of the podcast showed that no individual piece of the song could be considered really copied directly from the old song being credited, but given that it has a a similar instrumentation, similar structure, etc and certain parts that are relatively unique, like a repetitive whistled melody, the old song is given credit, and with that credit the owners of the credited song get some small cut of the profit of the crediting song.

Later in the episode the host reveals that interpolation credits in popular music have increased from about 10% per year before 2017 to about 20% per year afterward, and the major reason cited why is that, well, the record companies that own songs are encouraging it. There's a definite profit motive here -- when someone uses a song they already own to make something new, they will get a cut of the profit from that song, and the more vague the definition of "use" becomes, the more credits they can have, and therefore the more money they will make without having to even acquire more songs.

Now, I can make an argument against this practice due to the "modern media companies encourage homogeneous sludge" argument, but the more important note is how different the music industry is treating music credits versus how visual art credits simply do not work and allow for AI art to sneak in. If you made an AI music generator instead, made it scan top 40 hits back decades for its learning set, and then started posting the music as your own creation or as a way to get "free music", the RIAA would have your ass on a platter in less than a week.

And I am not saying this because the RIAA is 'good' -- it's not like the record companies, once they get that interpolation credit, are actually distributing that cut of profit fairly. But it's so demonstrative of how, when it comes to who makes money on art, it's entirely down to might makes right, and the only reason AI art is allowed to exist as "free art generation" is because it is taking exploiting artists who have no legal or financial power to stop them.

grayestofghosts: Elliot Alderson with the word hackerman superimposed (hackerman)
I was listening to the Alicia Navarro episode of Crime Junkie (don't judge me) and was struck by how much of the advice, understanding, and information about teenagers meeting sketchy people online has not changed in the past, oh... since I was doing it, so about fifteen years. And that is absolutely wild to me, because here I am, a grown up, who could literally tell you all about talking about strangers on the internet as a teenager and it being a formative experience. It was even stranger given that Brit, the co-host, gave a cursory nod about it being a formative experience for her but she didn't speak on it at all, instead giving priority to the same pablum that's always been said on it.

It's also weird that the advice and understanding is the same even though the internet was so different fifteen years ago! Kids rarely posted their full names online, or photos of themselves, or much about themselves beyond their interests and personal problems when they were conversing publicly on interest forums. Now, instead of every type of interest being separated into their own forums and there being spaces that were created to be kid- and teen-friendly like neopets and gaiaonline, everyone is shoved onto the same four social media sites where they're encouraged to post all sorts of personal information including photos and videos of themselves, or they're playing video games online where their voice is used to communicate which creates no record of what was actually said.

So much is made out of parental responsibility about this but there are so, so many ways that companies online have failed kids due to rampant need to monetize. A big part of this has been Youtube with various controversies from the video content directed at kids to the fact that algorithms in Youtube have been directing pedophiles to CESM. The destruction of forums has destroyed all but the broadest lines of moderation, and all of that moderation is focused on keeping the platform making money by keeping it in the Apple Store and the like, scrubbing sexual content not "for children" but for wealthy investors who think gay sex is icky. And this isn't even counting the culture these platforms encourage -- some kids were making carrds and insisting on full names, ages, marginalizations, mental and chronic illnesses etc. to be visible for people they interacted with and putting that information out there to be easily accessible is so dangerous not just from "internet predators" but also for way more mundane purposes.

The internet isn't even being made for humans in mind anymore, much less kids, and navigating it is way different than it was when I was a teenager -- so why are we stuck giving out the same advice on To Catch A Predator?

Profile

grayestofghosts: a sketch of a man reading a paper (Default)
Louis Chanina

December 2025

S M T W T F S
 123456
7 8910111213
14151617181920
212223 24252627
2829 3031   

Syndicate

RSS Atom

Most Popular Tags

Style Credit

Expand Cut Tags

No cut tags
Page generated Jan. 6th, 2026 10:49 pm
Powered by Dreamwidth Studios