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Comment by chx

2 years ago

This again? A blog post stuffed with stolen art and often heard but absolutely not working advice?

> Every morning, I start my day by planning it out in a custom template that displays my Google Calendar events and Todoist task list.

For real? One of the best ADHD tools I am aware of is called the Anti Planner.

It doesn't take long to find posts like "why to-do lists don't work for people with ADHD" https://coachjessicamichaels.com/2022/03/30/why-to-do-lists-...

Also, this blog post misses body doubling which is incredibly helpful and can even be done virtually with focusmate or a similar service (I use focusmate personally but I do want to spam so no referral link or crap like that). Indeed, for me the only way to swallow a frog is focusmate.

I feel similar with the “every morning” stuff. The problem is I have a very hard time making some happen every morning.

  • Same here. I have never been able to intentionally build a routine for just about anything, despite the autistic part of me aggressively wanting routine.

    • I find I love the ideas of structure and routine, and fully grasp the importance of maintaining invariants and discipline, but utterly fail to apply those concepts to my life. Rather frustrating

  • Reeks of the "don't break the chain" cultism that originates from an urban myth of about how Jerry Seinfeld practiced wiriting jokes.

Yeah but ADHD is different for everyone. Most if not all of the strategies mentioned work for me.

> stolen art

It looked AI-generated to me.

  • And AI art is theft.

    Hell, even a18n have admitted it! https://i.imgur.com/auBNG0N.jpg

    • I have grave reservations about AI art, but...nope, that doesn't follow.

      It's true that there are a lot of (human) artists in the US. (Something like 80 million, broadly defined.) And it's also true that the art and media each artist views shapes the art they create, including art and media we see quite incidentally - graffiti, ads on bus shelters, paintings in the hallways of office buildings. And in the course of the year each of us will view thousands upon thousands of such pieces of art and meida.

      So if we had a licensing scheme such that every artist had to make a non-negligible payment to the rights holder of every bit of media they view, then artists, collectively, would be liable for hundreds of billions of dollars in royalty payments. 80m aritsts * 1k pieces of media * $5 license fee is $400b; that's just basic math.

      This calculation is, very obviously, not an argument that all art is theft. It's just some math about a hypothetical licensing scheme, and that's all a18n were doing too.

      You may think (and I'm inclined to agree) that a human paging through an artist's ArtStation profile is fundamentally different than an LLM using it as training data, but that's an argument not addressed by a18n in that quote.

    • Your source does not support your claim. They say that if every single individual piece of data used to train a model was to be paid out, there would be a lot of payouts. You could just as easily say that if you had to pay the state for every step you took on the sidewalk, you would have to pay the state a lot. This does not prove that you are indebted to the state for millions in sidewalk usage because fortunately for you the law has not decided to make you pay for using the sidewalk, just as it has not decided to make training data have to pay per file.

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  • What's the difference between stolen art and ai generated stolen art? Both are illegal under the DMCA

    • Stolen art requires the original to be taken from its rightful owner. The original owner still has their work, meaning no theft has occurred. Also worth a mention is that in the case of AI art the original owner is hard to discern in the first place because the work is often too transformative to pin any part of it to even a single artist.

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  • It is mentioned at the bottom of the post that the images are generated by OpenAI‘s DALL-E.

Yes, the morning routine and "at the end of the day" journaling are things that I never successfully implemented.

Thanks for pointing to body doubling and anti planner. They seem like interesting concepts. Do you have any others that are worth checking?

Seeing the AI art might've thrown my senses off, but a lot of this reads like ChatGPT-writing.

> post stuffed with stolen art and often heard but absolutely not working advice?

But it gets you to the HN front page!