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Culture War Roundup for the week of December 19, 2022

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NAI, who suffered a high-profile hack & went on to watch their model be used as the basis for a thousand merges and derivatives, recently posted an infographic about how you can use their (unique, supposedly) style tokens to identify if a model is derived from theirs, and even the rough degree to which it was mixed in.

Tokens (even unused tokens!) are identifiable components of the model file structure, and (probably?) have to be. Combinations of tokens (which almost all of the NAI style tokens are) would be harder if you didn't know them, but they're still testable in seconds on consumer GPU or minutes on CPU. But very few people are interested in controlling tokens, and while NAI isn't the only group, there's not a ton of artists there.

Artists want to enforce on the media-level output, which is... more complicated, at best.