Comment on John Grisham, George R.R. Martin and more authors sue OpenAI for copyright infringement
abhibeckert@lemmy.world 1 year agoAI proponents seem to think it’s the Wild West
How exactly has OpenAI harmed GRRM? It’s not like you can ask it to output a free copy of an entire book.
FireTower@lemmy.world 1 year ago
If they used his works to train models without arranging proper licensing prior they’ve been unjustly enriched.
Nahvi@lemmy.world 1 year ago
I get the logic, but I think it is a more complex issue than that.
How many writer’s have read his works and been influenced by them? Did they just buy a proper license or just buy/borrow the book from somewhere?
FireTower@lemmy.world 1 year ago
There’s a fundamental difference between an author inspired by anothers work and an algorithm that was manufactured by a corporation to comb others work and reproduce derivatives, in my mind.
Nahvi@lemmy.world 1 year ago
Like the other commenter, I would be genuinely curious to here your thoughts on that fundamental difference.
I am by no means an AI expert, but my impressions is that AI sill needs to process each book and incorporate the new knowledge into its existing knowledge. Which at least from a surface level sounds a lot like what I do when I read a new book.
The fact that each AI is effectively a non-sapient slave of a person or corporation really doesn’t change my opinion.
Have you ever had a reason to read much in a new or developing sub-genre? As a fan of LitRPG, a genre that virtually didn’t exist 10 years ago, I can tell you with some certainty that everything is a derivative work of something. It is amazing how as soon as one author pulls in and idea from another genre, the next 30 novels that come out will have some variation of the same idea, and the 300 that follow it will each have variations of those.
Rivalarrival@lemmy.today 1 year ago
Please, articulate that difference, focusing specifically on what copyright actually protects.
That’s not a flippant statement. That’s an open, honest request.
I do not see any relevant difference between hiring a person to read and discuss a bunch of books, and a program built to read and discuss a bunch of books.