Comment on Judge Rules Training AI on Authors' Books Is Legal But Pirating Them Is Not
WindyRebel@lemmy.world 1 day agoIf you want 5 million books, you can’t just steal/pirate them, you need to buy 5 million copies. I’m glad the court ruled that way.
If you want 5 million books to train your AI to make you money, you can just steal them and reap benefits of other’s work. No need to buy 5 million copies!
/s
Jesus, dude.
hendrik@palaver.p3x.de 1 day ago
I'm not sure whose reading skills are not on par... But that's what I get from the article. They'll face consequences for stealing them.
NotASharkInAManSuit@lemmy.world 21 hours ago
They are and will continue to get away with this. Until they have to pay for IP use licensing for every use of their LLMs or dispersion models for every IP it scrapes from, which is something capitalism will never allow, this is all just a tax, and in the end it will simply lead to monopolies from tech buying out publishing houses. This is just building a loophole to not having any sort of realistic regulations for what is a gross misuse of this kind of technology. This is the consequence of the false doctrine of infinite growth.
hendrik@palaver.p3x.de 19 hours ago
Well, copyright law is kind of a bit older. When it was written, there was no AI. So it doesn't address our current issues. It's utterly unprepared for it. So people need to shoehorn things in, interpret and stretch it... Obviously that comes with a lot of issues, loopholes and shortcomings.
But I can't follow your argumentation. Why would they get away with this forever? When the car was invented, we also made up rules for cars, because the old ones for horses didn't help any more. That's how law is supposed to work... Problems surface, laws get passed to address them. That's daily business for governments.
If you want to share a pessimistic perspective about governments and mega-corporations, I'm all with you. That's very problematic. But some regions are better than others. Europe for example had a few clever ideas about what needs to be addressed. It's not perfect, though. And copyright still isn't solved anywhere. At least not to my knowledge.