• phillaholic@lemm.ee
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    1 year ago

    I don’t think it’s that simple. Like I said it’s a paradigm shift. It doesn’t fit into existing laws well. My point is what we consider fair use now, summarizing a book or movie by a human, is based on the limited abilities of humans. When you have AI with limitless abilities, that will change things. The same rules abs considerations may have to be rethought.

    • dorkian_gray@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      Au contraire, it is that simple and it is covered by existing law just fine in the very specific case we’re talking about, which is whether training a model is “transformative work” by the definition in IP law. It is. The law looks very specifically at the fact of the case, not hand-waving masquerading as an argument.

      You are making this technology out to be something it isn’t; there’s no mystery to how AI works, and it does not have “limitless abilities”. In fact, it is very limited, but that isn’t relevant. What the law considers “fair use” isn’t based on human ability at all, it’s based on how completely the work is reproduced and the context the original work is being used in. You clearly have access to the internet, you can verify the standards required to show breach of copyright yourself if you don’t believe me.