• A_Very_Big_Fan@lemmy.world
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    5 months ago

    Idk why this is such an unpopular opinion. I don’t need permission from an author to talk about their book, or permission from a singer to parody their song. I’ve never heard any good arguments for why it’s a crime to automate these things.

    I mean hell, we have an LLM bot in this comment section that took the article and spat 27% of it back out verbatim, yet nobody is pissing and moaning about it “stealing” the article.

    • Hawk@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      5 months ago

      What you’re giving as examples are legitimate uses for the data.

      If I write and sell a new book that’s just Harry Potter with names and terms switched around, I’ll definitely get in trouble.

      The problem is that the data CAN be used for stuff that violates copyright. And because of the nature of AI, it’s not even always clear to the user.

      AI can basically throw out a Harry Potter clone without you knowing because it’s trained on that data, and that’s a huge problem.

      • A_Very_Big_Fan@lemmy.world
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        5 months ago

        Out of curiosity I asked it to make a Harry Potter part 8 fan fiction, and surprisingly it did. But I really don’t think that’s problematic. There’s already an insane amount of fan fiction out there without the names swapped that I can read, and that’s all fair use.

        I mean hell, there are people who actually get paid to draw fictional characters in sexual situations that I’m willing to bet very few creators would prefer to exist lol. But as long as they don’t overstep the bounds of fair use, like trying to pass it off as an official work or submit it for publication, then there’s no copyright violation.

        The important part is that it won’t just give me the actual book (but funnily enough, it tried lol). If I meet a guy with a photographic memory and he reads my book, that’s not him stealing it or violating my copyright. But if he reproduces and distributes it, then we call it stealing or a copyright violation.