In reply to a developer on one of the Linux kernel mailing lists, Linux creator Linus Torvalds firmly put a foot down to push back against anti-AI comments.
There seems to be legal discussions about that. It’s not quite as simple as you say:
However, there may be cases in which a different assessment is justified, namely when users use and operate the LLM as a tool that merely implements their personal creative intent. This could be compared somewhat more vividly to using a paintbrush. If the brush merely rolls over the paper, for example because it is dropped, no copyright-protected work is created, even if paint remains on the paper. However, if a painter deliberately swings the brush in a certain way, a protected painting can be created. If AI is used in a comparable way a copyright-protected work can indeed be created.
yeah and the paintbrush somehow has abstracted access to millions of proprietary and copyleft licensed source code in forms of weight.
this is a clear misuse and abuse of any fair use rights, and clear push to centralisation of copyright to only a few companies with big budgets that can defend themselves.
i mean, can you really challenge and win against openai, a company backed by the govt, that your copyleft source code are misused as training data?
There seems to be legal discussions about that. It’s not quite as simple as you say:
https://kpmg-law.de/en/ai-and-copyright-what-is-permitted-when-using-llms/
yeah and the paintbrush somehow has abstracted access to millions of proprietary and copyleft licensed source code in forms of weight.
this is a clear misuse and abuse of any fair use rights, and clear push to centralisation of copyright to only a few companies with big budgets that can defend themselves.
i mean, can you really challenge and win against openai, a company backed by the govt, that your copyleft source code are misused as training data?