• webghost0101@sopuli.xyz
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    11 days ago

    The double standards of citizen vs companies when it comes to laws should rightfully called out.

    However, am i the only one who hopes they do get away with it.

    Intellectual property has always felt disgusting to me. Knowledge is to be used and shared, not exploited to feed ego.

    Copyright cannot die quick enough.

    This is also how a certain nation where this concept does not exist has become the defacto factory of the world. We have criminalized local competition for the arbitrary exclusivity of those who thought it -and filled in the paper work first.

    • AbsoluteChicagoDog@lemm.ee
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      10 days ago

      It’s cute that you think AI is going to kill copyright. Mark my words, copyright will continue to protect the big players and crush the little ones as it always does. Big AI corps will be protected by copyright laws.

      • webghost0101@sopuli.xyz
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        10 days ago

        AI is going to kill copyright

        Humans should kill copyright once they realize how detrimental it is.

        Ai is the most obvious sign yet that walling of intellectual ideas and restricting freedom of inspired thoughts is a incredibly nonsensical thing to do.

        I am not a fan of corpo AI but i do perceive that what these models simulate is similar to how humans reycle their environment for creativity.

        The future could go many ways, i wont claim to predict what we do but with mutual destruction as an option we need to do an effort to hope and aim for postive outcomes, lest we destroy the wold because we’re convinced that is the logical flow of events.

    • alexisonzen@sh.itjust.works
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      10 days ago

      I’m sure there a more nuanced takes than mine, but I feel like I can support copyright when it’s correctly used to protect individuals, but not when it’s being abused by corporations and large creators.

  • cheddar@programming.dev
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    11 days ago

    Is anyone surprised? If you are a big company, let’s say Boeing, you can lie to the authorities about your new plane and kill 346 people with no real consequences.

  • masterspace@lemmy.ca
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    11 days ago

    Given that the Internet Archive lost their case because the judge ruled that it wasn’t transformative enough, this doesn’t really seem that applicable. LLMs have a much stronger argument for being transformative.

    • Kowowow@lemmy.ca
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      11 days ago

      I wonder if you have a llm read it to you or something else kind of lazy would count

  • Rivalarrival@lemmy.today
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    11 days ago

    Uploading is infringement. Downloading is not infringement. Nobody (in the US, at least) has ever been successfully prosecuted for downloading. It is never an infringement to view a work, even if that work was explicitly infringing. It is never an infringement to discuss a work you have observed, even if you observed an infringing copy.

    If you ask an LLM about a copyrighted work, it does not regurgitate the work; it gives you a book report about the work. It does not create a copy; it creates a report, a summary. This is explicitly protected under fair use

    Rightsholders aren’t going to win this one.

  • Volkditty@lemmy.world
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    11 days ago

    Hey, I heard you mention AI, do you mind if I give you millions of dollars in venture capital?