[Discussion] Use of AI/LLM in the retro community

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KennyPowers

Active Tinkerer
Jun 27, 2022
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As usual, the law fails to keep up with the tech. I personally feel the Copyright law Fair Use provisions were never intended to be used this way. It’s an abuse. However, as usual, corporations win out over individuals, and the law is applied unfairly. Ask yourself why Anthropic didn’t have to pay the penalties kids sharing music files did? They got a slap on the wrist in comparison.
One *could* argue that the way Anthropic used training materials is more analogous to a budding professional musician learning from, and being influenced by music they heard on the radio to develop their own "product"...arguably different than openly redistributing copyrighted material as-is. It's definitely uncharted territory though.

Of course you're right that things like fair-use provisions and software/content licensing never saw these models coming, and the inertia behind them means that future laws/rulings are unlikely to significantly roll them back. It's also a certainty that the creators of much of what ended up being training materials never intended for their works to be used that way.

So ya...ethically questionable origins? Yes. Useful when used responsibly? Also yes. Potentially harmful when used irresponsibly? Of course.
 
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jmacz

Tinkerer
Mar 21, 2025
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You are going to have a wide range of opinions, and that’s normal and OK.

I appreciate photographs developed by the photographer from negatives. But I also appreciate correcting in Photoshop. And I also like the ability to generate what I want with AI. I like being able correct the one family member whose bare feet was showing not because I want a 100% correct untouched photo but because their feet showing was embarrassing to them and took away from the goal of that family photo.

I like watches. Mechanical because I appreciate the mechanism or how some are hand crafted. But I also wear a Casio because I appreciate it for what it is. Or my Apple Watch. Or just using my phone.

I enjoy creating things with a mill and lathe. But I also like simplifying fast projects with a CNC. And rapid prototyping with a 3D printer.

I use Claude Code. I also still hand craft 68K assembly. One for getting something done with minimal effort. One to enjoy the experience.

I know some like to argue that using AI means you lack understanding of the fundamentals. But then do most programmers these days understand things at the machine instruction level, or chip level, or everything underneath that allows them to code using a higher level language. If we had a major extinction level event, how many folks know how to reestablish the power grid, even telephones, let alone mobile phones and world wide internet? We take things for granted so the argument that you don’t understand the underpinnings only goes so far.

But I do think we are bound for some societal problems. Software engineering as a career is already heavily impacted by what we have created. And that’s not new. Has happened all the time, even during public cloud adoption, or the dotcom era.

But my biggest concern is no longer being able to believe what we hear or see. Audio proof wasn’t enough years ago and now video proof is also not enough. How does society change when you now must see it with your own eyes to believe it?
 

MacOfAllTrades

Tinkerer
Oct 5, 2022
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Appreciate everyone’s thoughts.

How about some thoughts on the potential harms specifically from using AI to make or help with _retro_ tech projects? Lots of good talk on general AI risks (art) or in modern application (i.e. not retro tech) and indirect stuff as well (hardware price impact due to AI that leads to price changes in retro tech related hardware) — but what about within retro tech directly?
 

jeffburg

Tinkerer
Aug 17, 2025
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Thanks for starting this thread. I think everyone has really great points. I will throw my personal opinion into the ring as a software developer, I like retro tech because its fun and I like making my old tech do things no one would have expected it could do, or at least it can no longer do due to the arbitrary technical blockers or lack of interest from big tech in continuing to support old tech.

So I think for modern production systems the discussion around should we use AI is extremely important because for a modern product, you have customers, you have legal and IP, and you have development cost to consider. But for retro-tech, we don't have those concerns. And I think I saw my opinion reinforced by @MacOfAllTrades back porting DOOM to a Mac SE:

I think AI will be a huge boon to retro tech enthusiasts... and I can elaborate why:

One of the main reasons supporting / developing on old platforms is a pain in the butt, is because newer platforms haver nicer API's, more built in features, and the languages have more syntactic sugar that makes, you the human, spend less time dealing with trivial computer things like memory management and IO and stuff.

With AI, now all of that stuff is a lot less important. The AI will happily do memory management, and other tedious tasks for you. It will help you back port your favorite software for your modern computer to your favorite retro computer. Need to integrate libcurl into your app, so that your app can do modern networking on an old computer? No problem, Gemini did that for me.

So in our world, where we do not sell software, we do not really have customers, and we work for free... AI is an absolute godsend with almost no downsides (data center energy usage aside) So, I realize this is a biased opinion because I literally released my own AI tool in the Software Development forum here yesterday. But I am super excited.

But as with all things, if people decide they don't want to use it because its not their preference or they object to it morally or ethically, I also totally understand that and I would not force someone to use it.
 

Certificate of Excellence

Active Tinkerer
Nov 1, 2021
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But as with all things, if people decide they don't want to use it because its not their preference or they object to it morally or ethically, I also totally understand that and I would not force someone to use it.
I like this a lot. I think it speaks to the freedom of choice which is very important. As creative & thoughtful people, we fortunately have the choice to use it or not. I can absolutely envision a subculture of sorts that is AI free - everything is done by a human ... which is awesome. Its advertised, spoken to, worn as a badge of honor and culturally important to that group of people. Like web v1 folks or buy American made folks, it's great to have that ability to express your ideological ethos in action - where the rubber hits the road. As spoken to earlier, where a product and profit motive is involved or where key security infrastructure is involved, its can get murky and quite granular where broader brushes would fail, but for us, it can in many ways boil down simply to choice as an expression of our personal ethos.