We Asked A.I. to Create the Joker. It Generated a Copyrighted Image.::Artists and researchers are exposing copyrighted material hidden within A.I. tools, raising fresh legal questions.

  • interdimensionalmeme@lemmy.ml
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    5 months ago

    It’s not infringing, that’s like saying advertising is infringed by being copied.

    If you show your images in public and thet get picked up by crawling spiders, you don’t have a case to curtail its spread.

  • gmtom@lemmy.world
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    5 months ago

    God I fucking hate this braindesd AI boogeyman nonsense.

    Yeah, no shit you ask the AI to create a picture of a specific actor from a specific movie, its going yo look like a still from that movie.

    Or if you ask it to create “an animated sponge wearing pants” it’s going to give you spongebob.

    You should think of these AIs as if you asking an artist freind of yours to draw a picture for you. So if you say “draw an Italian video games chsracter” then obviously they’re going to draw Mario.

    And also I want to point out they interview some professor of English for some reason, but they never interview, say, a professor of computer science and AI, because they don’t want people that actually know what they’re talking about giving logical answers, they want random bloggers making dumb tests and “”“exposing”“” AI and how it steals everything!!!1!!! Because that’s what gets clicks.

  • BreakDecks@lemmy.ml
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    5 months ago

    The fundamental philosophical question we need to answer here is whether Generative Art simply has the ability to infringe intellectual property, or if that ability makes Generative Art an infringement in and of itself.

    I am personally in the former camp. AI models are just tools that have to be used correctly. There’s also no reason that you shouldn’t be allowed to generate existing IP with those models insofar as it isn’t done for commercial purposes, just as anyone with a drawing tablet and Adobe can draw unlicensed fan art of whatever they want.

    I don’t really care if AI can draw a convincing Ironman. Wake me when someone uses AI in such a way that actually threatens Disney. It’s still the responsibility of any publisher or commercial entity not to brazenly use another company’s IP without permission, that the infringement was done with AI feel immaterial.

    Also, the “memorization” issue seems like it would only be an issue for corporate IP that has the highest risk of overrepresentation in an image dataset, not independent artists who would actually see a real threat from an AI lifting their IP.

  • Xanthrax@lemmy.world
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    5 months ago

    Stable diffusion is in the name for a reason. It’s supposed to do that. The new image is now real, legally protected art, what makes it unscrupulous was how private/ copyrighted material was scraped.

    I’m not trying to refute the article, but my point is… this point didn’t need to be made at all.

    • Boiglenoight@lemmy.world
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      5 months ago

      Until there’s legal precedent for prosecution or laws clarified that AI cannot be trained on copyrighted material without the express permission of the author, it needs to be named and shamed. Otherwise it’s piracy on a breathtaking scale being turned into profit for Open AI with most people not knowing what the problem/big deal is.

  • antihumanitarian@lemmy.world
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    5 months ago

    This is a classic problem for machine learning systems, sometimes called over fitting or memorization. By analogy, it’s the difference between knowing how to do multiplication vs just memorizing the times tables. With enough training data and large enough storage AI can feign higher “intelligence”, and that is demonstrably what’s going on here. It’s a spectrum as well. In theory, nearly identical recall is undesirable, and there are known ways of shifting away from that end of the spectrum. Literal AI 101 content.

    • KeenFlame@feddit.nu
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      5 months ago

      No it is not. What is going on nobody calls intelligence. They train a model to draw this so that is what it does. Nothing here has anything to do with any problems with machine learning

          • gamermanh@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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            5 months ago

            Ellipses are used in quotes to remove irrelevant parts without changing the meaning of the sentence. Makes it take less time to quote someone

            Apparently you’re unfamiliar with basic concepts of the language we’re using here

            • KairuByte@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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              5 months ago

              You typically wrap those ellipses in square brackets when making such a change. In fact, you do so with any editorial changes to a quote to make things more clear.

              For example, if Mike was quoted about the war in Ukraine as saying “I just think this whole thing is silly, they should stop” you could alter the quote as such: Mike said “I just think […] [Russia] should stop.”

  • silentdon@lemmy.world
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    5 months ago

    We asked A.I. to create a copyrighted image from the Joker movie. It generated a copyrighted image as expected.

    Ftfy

    • Fisk400@feddit.nu
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      5 months ago

      What it proves is that they are feeding entire movies into the training data. It is excellent evidence for when WB and Disney decides to sue the shit out of them.

      • Mirodir@discuss.tchncs.de
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        5 months ago

        I think it’s much more likely whatever scraping they used to get the training data snatched a screenshot of the movie some random internet user posted somewhere. (To confirm, I typed “joaquin phoenix joker” into Google and this very image was very high up in the image results) And of course not only this one but many many more too.

        Now I’m not saying scraping copyrighted material is morally right either, but I’d doubt they’d just feed an entire movie frame by frame (or randomly spaced screenshots from throughout a movie), especially because it would make generating good labels for each frame very difficult.

        • otp@sh.itjust.works
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          5 months ago

          I just googled “what does joker look like” and it was the fourth hit on image search.

          Well, it was actually an article (unrelated to AI) that used the image.

          But then I went simpler – googling “joker” gives you the image (from the IMDb page) as the second hit.

        • Jarix@lemmy.world
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          5 months ago

          Yes. Thats what these things are, extremely large catalogues of data. As much data as possible is their goal.

          • EdibleFriend@lemmy.world
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            5 months ago

            True but it didn’t pick some random frame somewhere in the movie it chose a extremely memorable shot that is posted all over the place. I won’t deny that they are probably feeding it movies but this is not a sign of that.

            This image is literally the top result on Google images for me.

            • Jarix@lemmy.world
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              5 months ago

              Why would it pick some random frame in the middle of its data set instead of a frame it has the most to reference. It can still use all those other frames to then pick the frame if has the most references to.

              But im starting to think maybe i misunderstood the comment i replied to.

              Sorry, im way out of context with my reply, totally my fault for reflexively replying.

              Uhhh would you accept i didnt have my coffee yet and hadnt got out of bed yet as an explanation?

      • Even_Adder@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        5 months ago

        The way it was done if I remember correctly is that someone found out v6 was trained partially with Stockbase images-caption pairs, so they went to Stockbase and found some images and used those exact tags in the prompts.

      • orclev@lemmy.world
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        5 months ago

        WB and Disney would lose, at least without an amendment to copyright law. That in fact just happened in one court case. It was ruled that using a copyrighted work to train AI does not violate that works copyright.

        • asret@lemmy.zip
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          5 months ago

          Using it to train on is very different from distributing derived works.

            • asret@lemmy.zip
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              5 months ago

              Something transformative from the original works. And arguably not being being distributed. The model producing and distributing derivative works is entirely different though. No one really gives a shit about data being used to train models - there’s nothing infringing about that which is exactly why they won their case. The example in the post is an entirely different situation though.

      • LainTrain@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        5 months ago

        I have that exact same .jpeg stored on my computer and I don’t even know where it came from. I don’t even watch superhero films

          • LainTrain@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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            5 months ago

            They’re not selling it though, they’re selling a machine with which you could commit copyright infringement. Like my PC, my HDD, my VCR…

            • wildginger@lemmy.myserv.one
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              5 months ago

              No, they are selling you time in a digital room with a machine, and all of the things it spits out at you.

              You dont own the program generating these images. You are buying these images and the time to tinker with the AI interface.

              • LainTrain@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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                5 months ago

                I’m not buying anything, most AI is free as in free beer and open source e.g. Stable Diffusion, Mistral…

                Unlike hardware it’s actually accessible to everyone with sufficient know-how.

                • wildginger@lemmy.myserv.one
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                  5 months ago

                  Youre pretty young, huh. When something on the internet from a big company is free, youre the product.

                  Youre bug and stress testing their hardware, and giving them free advertising. While using the cheapest, lowest quality version that exists, and only for as long as they need the free QA.

                  The real AI, and the actual quality outputs, cost money. And once they are confident in their server stability, the scraps youre picking over will get a price tag too.

    • esc27@lemmy.world
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      5 months ago

      Voyager just loaded a copyrighted image on my phone. Guess someone’s gonna have to sue them too.

      • otp@sh.itjust.works
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        5 months ago

        I just remembered a copyrighted image. Oops.

        Hey, I bet there were complaints about Google showing image results at some point too! Lol

      • Vincent Adultman@lemmy.world
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        5 months ago

        Yeah man, Voyager is making millions with the images on the app. It makes me so mad, they Voyager people make you think they are generating content on their own, but in reality is just feeding you unlicensed content from others.

        • eric@lemmy.world
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          5 months ago

          You’re completely missing the point. Making money doesn’t change the legality. YouTube was threatened by the RIAA before they even started showing ads. Displaying an image from a copyrighted work on an AI platform is not much different technologically than Voyager or even Google Images displaying the same image, and both could also be interpreted as “feeding you unlicensed content from others.”

          • MadBigote@lemmy.world
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            5 months ago

            Making money doesn’t change the legality.

            Except that it actually does? That’s the point of copyright laws. The LLM/AIs are using copyright protected material as source without paying for it, and then selling it’s output as "original '.

            • wewbull@feddit.uk
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              5 months ago

              Oh! That’s why torrent sites aren’t under constant threat despite hosting tons of free copyright material.

              Hang on… Yes they are!

    • Rentlar@lemmy.ca
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      5 months ago

      When they asked for an Italian video game character it returned something with unmistakable resemblance to Mario with other Nintendo property like Luigi, Toad etc. … so you don’t even have to ask for a “screencapture” directly for it to use things that are clearly based on copyrighted characters.

      • sir_reginald@lemmy.world
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        5 months ago

        you’re still asking for a character from a video game, which implies copyrighted material. write the same thing in google and take a look at the images. you get what you ask for.

        you can’t, obviously, use any image of Mario for anything outside fair use, no matter if AI generated or you got it from the internet.

        • doctorcrimson@lemmy.world
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          5 months ago

          But the AI didn’t credit the clear inspiration. That’s the problem, that is what makes it theft: you need permission to profit off of the works of others.

          • sir_reginald@lemmy.world
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            5 months ago

            you need permission to profit off of the works of others.

            but that’s exactly what I said. you can’t grab an image of Mario from google and profit from it as you can’t draw a fan art of Mario and profit from it as well as you can’t generate an image of Mario and profit from it.

            It doesn’t matter if you’re generating it with software or painting it on canvas, if it contains intellectual property of others, you can’t (legally) use it for profit.

            however, generating it and posting it as a meme on the internet falls under fair use, just like using original art and making a meme.

            • doctorcrimson@lemmy.world
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              5 months ago

              The users are allowed to ask for those things

              The AI company should not be allowed to give it in return for monetary gain.

      • Jilanico@lemmy.world
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        5 months ago

        If you asked me to draw an Italian video game character, I’d draw Mario too. Why can’t an AI make copyrighted character inspired pics as long as they aren’t being sold?

        • doctorcrimson@lemmy.world
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          5 months ago

          You credited it just now as Mario, a Nintendo property, which the AI failed to do. Plus, if you were paid to draw Mario then you’d have broken laws about IP. Why don’t those same rules apply to AI?

        • cecinestpasunbot@lemmy.ml
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          5 months ago

          Well that’s exactly the problem. If people use AI generated images for commercial purposes they may accidentally infringe on someone else’s copyright. Since AI models are a black box there isn’t really a good way to avoid this.

          • doctorcrimson@lemmy.world
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            5 months ago

            Sure there is, force the AI to properly credit artists and if they don’t have permission to use the character then the prompt fails. Or the AI operators have no legal rights to charge for services and should be sued into the ground.

  • taranasus@lemmy.world
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    5 months ago

    I took a gun, pointed it at another person, pulled the trigger and it killed that person.

  • orclev@lemmy.world
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    5 months ago

    They literally asked it to give them a screenshot from the Joker movie. That was their fucking prompt. It’s not like they just said “draw Joker” and it spit out a screenshot from the movie, they had to work really hard to get that exact image.

    • doctorcrimson@lemmy.world
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      5 months ago

      If you read further they also tested many other much more vague prompts, all of which gave intellectual properties they did not have the rights to. The Jaoquin Pheonix image isn’t any less illegal, either, though because they don’t have the legal rights to profit off of that IP without permission or proper credit.

      • orclev@lemmy.world
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        5 months ago

        Yes, look how specific they were. I didn’t even need to get that exact with a google image search. I literally searched for “Joaquin Phoenix Joker” and that exact image was the very first result.

        They specified that it had to be that specific actor, as that specific character, from that specific movie, and that it had to be a screenshot from a scene in the movie… and they got exactly what they asked for. This isn’t shocking. Shocking would have been if it didn’t produce something nearly identical to that image.

        A more interesting result would be what it would spit out if you asked for say “Heath Ledger Joker movie, 2019, screenshot from a movie, movie scene”.

    • dragontamer@lemmy.world
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      5 months ago

      Because this proves that the “AI”, at some level, is storing the data of the Joker movie screenshot somewhere inside of its training set.

      Likely because the “AI” was trained upon this image at some point. This has repercussions with regards to copyright law. It means the training set contains copyrighted data and the use of said training set could be argued as piracy.

      Legal discussions on how to talk about generative-AI are only happening now, now that people can experiment with the technology. But its not like our laws have changed, copyright infringement is copyright infringement. If the training data is obviously copyright infringement, then the data must be retrained in a more appropriate manner.

      • archomrade [he/him]@midwest.social
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        5 months ago

        I’ve had this discussion before, but that’s not how copyright exceptions work.

        Right or wrong (it hasn’t been litigated yet), AI models are being claimed as fair use exceptions to the use of copyrighted material. Similar to other fair uses, the argument goes something like:

        “The AI model is simply a digital representation of facts gleamed from the analysis of copyrighted works, and since factual data cannot be copyrighted (e.g. a description of the Mona Lisa vs the painting itself), the model itself is fair use”

        I think it’ll boil down to whether the models can be easily used as replacements to the works being claimed, and honestly I think that’ll fail. That the models are quite good at reconstructing common expressions of copyrighted work is novel to the case law, though, and worthy of investigation.

        But as someone who thinks ownership of expressions is bullshit anyway, I tend to think copyright is not the right way to go about penalizing or preventing the harm caused by the technology.

        • rottingleaf@lemmy.zip
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          5 months ago

          “The AI model is simply a digital representation of facts gleamed from the analysis of copyrighted works, and since factual data cannot be copyrighted (e.g. a description of the Mona Lisa vs the painting itself), the model itself is fair use”

          So selling fan fiction and fan-made game continuations and modifications should be legal?

          • Womble@lemmy.world
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            5 months ago

            Not the OP, but yes it absolutely should. The idea you can legaly block someones creative expression because they are using elements of culture you have obtained a monopoly of is obscene.

            • rottingleaf@lemmy.zip
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              5 months ago

              I know it should. Only then we’d have no IP remaining. As it should be, the only case where it’s valid is punishing somebody impersonating the author or falsely claiming authorship, and that’s frankly just fraud.

          • archomrade [he/him]@midwest.social
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            5 months ago

            It should, but also that is significantly different from what an AI model is.

            It would be more like a list of facts and information about the structure of another work, and facts and patterns about lots of other similar works; and that list of facts can easily be used to create other, very similar works, but also it can be used to create entirely new works that follow patters from the other works.

            In as much as the model can be used to create infringing works -but is not one itself- makes this similar to other cases where a platform or tool can be used in infringing ways. In such cases, if the platform or tool is responsible for reasonable protections from such uses, then they aren’t held liable themselves. Think Youtube DMCA, Facebook content moderation, or even Google Books search. I think this is likely the way this goes; there is just too strong a case (with precedent) that the model is fair use.

        • kromem@lemmy.world
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          5 months ago

          Copyright law is the right tool, but the companies are chasing the wrong side of the equation.

          Training should not and I suspect will not be found to be infringement. If old news articles from the NYT can teach a model language in ways that help it review medical literature to come up with novel approaches to cure cancer, there’s a whole host of features from public good to transformational use going on.

          What they should be throwing resources at is policing usage not training. Make the case that OpenAI is liable for infringing generation. Ensure that there needs to be copyright checking on outputs. In many ways this feels like a repeat of IP criticisms around the time Google acquired YouTube which were solved with an IP tagging system.

          • ryathal@sh.itjust.works
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            5 months ago

            There’s no money for them in that angle though. It’s much easier to sue xerox for enabling copyright violations than the person who used the machine to violate copyright.

            Courts have already handled this with copy machines. AI isn’t terribly different, it’s unlikely these suits against model creators succeed.

            • kromem@lemmy.world
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              5 months ago

              There’s money (and more importantly, survival) if they can ensure liability of Xerox for infringement on the use of their centralized copiers.

              There actually isn’t survival as a company even if they succeed on training but not the other, which I don’t think they realize yet.

              As an aside, one of the worst legal takes I read on this was from a GC at the Copyright office during the 70s who extensively used poor analogies to copiers to justify an infringement argument.

          • azuth@sh.itjust.works
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            5 months ago

            Should Photoshop check your image for copyright infringement? Should Adobe be liable for copyright infringing or offensive images users of it’s program create?

            • kromem@lemmy.world
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              5 months ago

              If it’s contributing creatively to your work, yeah, totally.

              If you ask Photoshop fill to add an italian plumber and you’ve been living under a rock for you life so you don’t realize it’s Mario, when you get sued by Nintendo for copyright infringement it’d be much better policy if it was Adobe on the hook for adding copyrighted material and not the end user.

              A better analogy is: if you hired a graphic designer and they gave you copyrighted material, who is liable?

              • azuth@sh.itjust.works
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                5 months ago

                If it’s contributing creatively to your work, yeah, totally.

                AI is not contributing creatively though, programs do not create.

                If you ask Photoshop fill to add an italian plumber and you’ve been living under a rock for you life so you don’t realize it’s Mario, when you get sued by Nintendo for copyright infringement it’d be much better policy if it was Adobe on the hook for adding copyrighted material and not the end user.

                I am speaking of Photoshop used as a non-AI tool as it has been used to commit copyright infringement for decades before Photoshop fill was a thing. Should it check if your image infringes on copyright?

                A better analogy is: if you hired a graphic designer and they gave you copyrighted material, who is liable?

                The graphic designer. If you went ahead and redistributed it you would also be liable. Whatever program he used or it’s developer wouldn’t be liable.

                • kromem@lemmy.world
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                  5 months ago

                  AI is not contributing creatively though, programs do not create.

                  You and I will have to agree to disagree on that Kool-aid, and it’s that disagreement which is core to the model provider being liable for introducing copyright infringement.

            • wildginger@lemmy.myserv.one
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              5 months ago

              Did photoshop create a portion of my image? Did adobe add a “generate the picture I asked for, for me, without my input beyond a typed prompt” as a feature?

              Because if they did, 100% yeah, theyre liable.

              • azuth@sh.itjust.works
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                5 months ago

                They actually are not whether you use a prompt to generate the picture or a digitally paint it with a tablet.

                The user would be the one committing copyright infringement.

      • CyberSeeker@discuss.tchncs.de
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        5 months ago

        So let’s say I ask a talented human artist the same thing.

        Doesn’t this prove that a human, at some level, is storing the data of the Joker movie screenshot somewhere inside of their memory?

        • dragontamer@lemmy.world
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          5 months ago

          So let’s say I ask a talented human artist the same thing.

          Artists don’t have hard drives or solid state drives that accept training weights.

          When you have a hard drive (or other object that easily creates copies), then the law that follows is copyright, with regards to the use and regulation of those copies. It doesn’t matter if you use a Xerox machine, VHS tape copies, or a Hard Drive. All that matters is that you’re easily copying data from one location to another.

          And yes. When a human recreates a copy of a scene clearly inspired by copyrighted data, its copyright infringement btw. Even if you recreate it from memory. It doesn’t matter how I draw Pikachu, if everyone knows and recognizes it as Pikachu, I’m infringing upon Nintendo’s copyright (and probably their trademark as well).

        • Auli@lemmy.ca
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          5 months ago

          Nope humans don’t store data perfectly with perfect recall.

            • dragontamer@lemmy.world
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              5 months ago

              If they’re copying copyrighted works, usually its a fine, especially if they’re making money from it.

              You know that performance artists get sued when they replicate a song in public from memory, right?

          • abhibeckert@lemmy.world
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            Humans can get pretty close to perfect recall with enough practice - show a human that exact joker image hundreds of thousands of times, they’re going to be able to remember every detail.

            That’s what happened here - the example images weren’t just in the training set once, they are in the training set over and over and over again across hundreds of thousands of websites.

            If someone wants these images nobody is going to use AI to access it - they’ll just do a google image search. There is no way Warner Brothers is harmed in any way by this, which is a strong fair use defence.

      • Schmidtster@lemmynsfw.com
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        5 months ago

        I mean anyone can use copyrighted material as inspiration for their work and it’s fair use and not a concern at all.

        Is Ai only bad since it can do what a human does better/faster? If that’s that case, than they don’t actually have an issue with the fact it’s copyrighted, or I wouldn’t be able to use it for inspiration either.

        • dragontamer@lemmy.world
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          Is Ai only bad since it can do what a human does better/faster?

          Legally speaking, AI is not anything. Its just a computer program. What you’re asking is completely a red-herring.

          The question here is if the training-weights constitute copyright infringement. Now look at any clip-art set. Most clip-art is so called “royalty free”, as in you can copy it from computer-to-computer without any copyright issues, because the author specifically said that its royalty free.

          But if you have a copyrighted font, then even copying that font from one computer to another constitutes copyright infringement. (IE: Literally, you aren’t allowed to copy this unless you have the permission of the author).

          So, when you download Midjourney’s training weights, does that act in of itself constitute a copy that violate’s the authors of “Joker” movie? As far as I can tell, yes. Because the training weights clearly contain Joker images.

          • Schmidtster@lemmynsfw.com
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            Hows it a red herring to point out we are allowed to use copyrighted materials already? Its not the concern here, yet its what they are using as the concern for their arguments against it.

            • dragontamer@lemmy.world
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              Because copyright law is clear in that computers can’t own a copyright.

              The humans at play are:

              1. The artist who created the original work.

              2. The computer IT team who are copying the data behind the scenes between servers.

              3. You who uses Midjourney to recreate “Joker” movie artwork, likely using the data in #2 which falls under copyright infringement.

              It doesn’t matter how #2 works. It doesn’t matter if its H.265 or MPEG2 or from VHS tapes, or if its a Neural Network using the latest-and-greatest training weights from a GPU-based datasystem. Its just a computer. The ones doing the copyright infringement are the people copying data from place to place.

              • orclev@lemmy.world
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                5 months ago

                The AI model is not a copy of the set of data used to train it, it’s a derivative work. As such copyright as it currently stands does not apply. It’s possible, likely even, that copyright will be modified in some way soon to account for this, but the situation today says nope, not copyright infringement.

                • Dkarma@lemmy.world
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                  5 months ago

                  They’re really trying so hard cuz they absolutely want this to be infringement but it simply isnt on any legal level.

          • Jilanico@lemmy.world
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            5 months ago

            Looking at a copyrighted font with your computer means the font is in your computer’s memory. Do I go to jail for every site I visit that uses a fancy font?

            Font files ≠ framebuffer

            Images ≠ neural network weights

            • dragontamer@lemmy.world
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              Do I go to jail for every site I visit that uses a fancy font?

              If its a fancy copyrighted font without a license to copy… the Website owner gets sued. Because the website owner is the one making mass copies of said font.

              Do… you know what copyrites are? They relate to the copying of data.

              • Jilanico@lemmy.world
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                5 months ago

                The framebuffer on your computer copies the data to display the font to you. That’s my point. Not every form of copying infringes on copyright.

                • dragontamer@lemmy.world
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                  And my argument is that Midjourney’s servers are engaged in illegal copying. So I think your point is moot. Not the Web Browsers downloading images.

                  The movie Joker’s image is being copied each time the training weights are copied to a new server. Is that not an illegal copy?

        • Match!!@pawb.social
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          5 months ago

          In these cases it’s bad because it can do what a human does with no ethics, empathy, or regard for the law. If it had those things, it would be worse because we’d then be encroaching on the rights of sentient beings.

          • Auli@lemmy.ca
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            5 months ago

            Problem is the AI didn’t do anything. People told the program tongo scrape the internet. So humans still made the decision with no regard doe the laws.

      • GenderNeutralBro@lemmy.sdf.org
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        5 months ago

        Because this proves that the “AI”, at some level, is storing the data of the Joker movie

        I don’t think that’s a justified conclusion.

        If I watched a movie, and you asked me to reproduce a simple scene from it, then I could do that if I remembered the character design, angle, framing, etc. None of this would require storing the image, only remembering the visual meaning of it and how to represent that with the tools at my disposal.

        If I reproduced it that closely (or even not-nearly-that-closely), then yes, my work would be considered a copyright violation. I would not be able to publish and profit off of it. But that’s on me, not on whoever made the tools I used. The violation is in the result, not the tools.

        The problem with these claims is that they are shifting the responsibility for copyright violation off of the people creating the art, and onto the people making the tools used to create the art. I could make the same image in Photoshop; are they going after Adobe, too? Of course not. You can make copyright-violating work in any medium, with any tools. Midjourney is a tool with enough flexibility to create almost any image you can imagine, just like Photoshop.

        Does it really matter if it takes a few minutes instead of hours?

        • rambaroo@lemmy.world
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          AIs are not humans my dude. I don’t know why people keep using this argument. They specifically designed this thing to scrape copyrighted material, it’s not like an artist who was just inspired by something.

          • GenderNeutralBro@lemmy.sdf.org
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            5 months ago

            Photoshop is not human. AutoTune is not human. Cameras are not human. Microphones are not human. Paintbrushes are not human. Etc.

            AI did not create this. A HUMAN created this with AI. The human is responsible for the creating it. The human is responsible for publishing it.

            Please stop anthropomorphizing AI!

          • archomrade [he/him]@midwest.social
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            5 months ago

            It isn’t human, but that IS how it works.

            It’s analyzing material and extracting data about it, not compiling the data itself. In much the same way TDM (textual data mining) analyzes text and extracts information about it for the purposes of search and classification, or sentiment analysis, ECT, an “AI” model analyses material and extracts information on how to construct new language or visual media that relates to text prompts.

            It’s important to understand this because it’s core to the fair use defence getting claimed. The models are derived from copyrighted works, but they aren’t themselves infringing. There is precedent for similar cases being fair use.

      • LainTrain@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        5 months ago

        By that logic I am also storing that image in my dataset, because I know and remember this exact image. I can reproduce it from memory too.

        • dragontamer@lemmy.world
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          5 months ago

          You ever try to do a public performance of a copyrighted work, like “Happy Birthday to You” ??

          You get sued. Even if its from memory. Welcome to copyright law. There’s a reason why every restaraunt had to make up a new “Happy Happy Birthday, from the Birthday Crew” song.

          • LainTrain@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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            5 months ago

            Yeah, but until I perform it without a license for profit, I don’t get sued.

            So it’s up to the user to make sure that if any material that is generated is copyright infringing, it should not be used.

            • dragontamer@lemmy.world
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              5 months ago

              Otakon anime music videos have no profits but they explicitly get a license from RIAA to play songs in public.

              • LainTrain@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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                5 months ago

                So? I’m not saying those are fair terms, I would also prefer if that were not the case, but AI isn’t performing in public any more having a guitar with you in public is ripping off Metallica.

                • dragontamer@lemmy.world
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                  You don’t need to perform “for profit” to get sued for copyright infringement.

                  but AI isn’t performing in public any more having a guitar with you in public is ripping off Metallica.

                  Is the Joker image in that article derivative or substantially similar to a copyrighted work? Is the query available to anyone who uses Midjourney? Are the training weights being copied from server-to-server behind the scenes? Were the training weights derived from copyrighted data?

      • Jilanico@lemmy.world
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        5 months ago

        Because this proves that the “AI”, at some level, is storing the data of the Joker movie screenshot somewhere inside of its training set.

        Is it tho? Honest question.

          • Jilanico@lemmy.world
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            5 months ago

            So stable diffusion, midjourney, etc., all have massive databases with every picture on the Internet stored in them? I know the AI models are trained on lots of images, but are the images actually stored? I’m skeptical, but I’m no expert.

            • QubaXR@lemmy.world
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              5 months ago

              These models were trained on datasets that, without compensating the authors, used their work as training material. It’s not every picture on the net, but a lot of it is scrubbing websites, portfolios and social networks wholesale.

              A similar situation happens with large language models. Recently Meta admitted to using illegally pirated books (Books3 database to be precise) to train their LLM without any plans to compensate the authors, or even as much as paying for a single copy of each book used.

              • Jilanico@lemmy.world
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                5 months ago

                Most of the stuff that inspires me probably wasn’t paid for. I just randomly saw it online or on the street, much like an AI.

                AI using straight up pirated content does give me pause tho.

                • QubaXR@lemmy.world
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                  I was on the same page as you for the longest time. I cringed at the whole “No AI” movement and artists’ protest. I used the very same idea: Generations of artists honed their skills by observing the masters, copying their techniques and only then developing their own unique style. Why should AI be any different? Surely AI will not just copy works wholesale and instead learn color, composition, texture and other aspects of various works to find it’s own identity.

                  It was only when my very own prompts started producing results I started recognizing as “homages” at best and “rip-offs” at worst that gave me a stop.

                  I suspect that earlier generations of text to image models had better moderation of training data. As the arms race heated up and pace of development picked up, companies running these services started rapidly incorporating whatever training data they could get their hands on, ethics, copyright or artists’ rights be damned.

                  I remember when MidJourney introduced Niji (their anime model) and I could often identify the mangas and characters used to train it. The imagery Niji produced kept certain distinct and unique elements of character designs from that training data - as a result a lot of characters exhibited “Chainsaw Man” pointy teeth and sticking out tongue - without as much as a mention of the source material or even the themes.

              • archomrade [he/him]@midwest.social
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                These models were trained on datasets that, without compensating the authors, used their work as training material.

                Couple things:

                • this doesn’t explain ops question about how the information is stored. On fact op is right, that the images and source material is NOT stored in a database within the model, it basically just stores metadata about the source material as a whole in order to construct new material from text descriptions

                • the use of copyrighted works in the training isn’t necessarily infringing if the model is found to be a fair use, and there is a very strong fair use argument here.

                • QubaXR@lemmy.world
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                  5 months ago

                  “metadata” is such a pretty word. How about “recipe” instead? It stores all information necessary to reproduce work verbatim or grab any aspect of it.

                  The legal issue of copyright is a tricky one, especially in the US where copyright is often being weaponized by corporations. The gist of it is: The training model itself was an academic endeavor and therefore falls under a fair use. Companies like StabilityAI or OpenAI then used these datasets and monetized products built on them, which in my understanding skims gray zone of being legal.

                  If these private for-profit companies simply took the same data and built their own, identical dataset they would be liable to pay the authors for use of their work in commercial product. They go around it by using the existing model, originally created for research and not commercial use.

                  Lemmy is full of open source and FOSS enthusiasts, I’m sure someone can explain it better than I do.

                  All in all I don’t argue about the legality of AI, but as a professional creative I highlight ethical (plagiarism) risks that are beginning to arise in majority of the models. We all know Joker, Marvel superheroes, popular Disney and WB cartoon characters - and can spot when “our” generations cross the line of copying someone else’s work. But how many of us are familiar with Polish album cover art, Brazilian posters, Chinese film superheroes or Turkish logos? How sure can we be that the work “we” produced using AI is truly original and not a perfect copy of someone else’s work? Does our ignorance excuse this second-hand plagiarism? Or should the companies releasing AI models stop adding features and fix that broken foundation first?

          • Schmidtster@lemmynsfw.com
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            5 months ago

            I posted it on my website as fan art and it scraped it. I just used a different filter which falls under fair use.

          • Jilanico@lemmy.world
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            5 months ago

            It’s too hard to type up how generative AIs work, but look up a video on “how stable diffusion works” or something like that. I seriously doubt they have a massive database with every image from the Internet inside it, with the AI just spitting those pics out, but I’m no expert.

          • Jilanico@lemmy.world
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            5 months ago

            I agree, but I don’t think these generative AIs actually store image files off the Internet in a massive database. I could be wrong.

      • abhibeckert@lemmy.world
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        But where is the infringement?

        This NYT article includes the same several copyrighted images and they surely haven’t paid any license. It’s obviously fair use in both cases and NYT’s claim that “it might not be fair use” is just ridiculous.

        Worse, the NYT also includes exact copies of the images, while the AI ones are just very close to the original. That’s like the difference between uploading a video of yourself playing a Taylor Swift cover and actually uploading one of Taylor Swift’s own music videos to YouTube.

        Even worse the NYT intentionally distributed the copyrighted images, while Midjourney did so unintentionally and specifically states it’s a breach of their terms of service. Your account might be banned if you’re caught using these prompts.

        • jacksilver@lemmy.world
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          5 months ago

          You do realize that newspapers do typically pay the licensing for images, it’s how things like Getty images exist.

          On the flip side, OpenAI (and other companies) are charging someone access to their model, which is then returning copyrighted images without paying the original creator.

          That’s why situations like this keep getting talked about, you have a 3rd party charging people for copyrighted materials. We can argue that it’s a tool, so you aren’t really “selling” copyrighted data, but that’s the issue that is generally be discussed in these kinds of articles/court cases.

          • ApollosArrow@lemmy.world
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            5 months ago

            Mostly playing devil’s advocate here (since I don’t think ai should be used commercially), but I’m actually curious about this, since I work in media… You can get away using images or footage for free if it falls under editorial or educational purposes. I know this can vary from place to place, but with a lot of online news sites now charging people to view their content, they could potentially be seen as making money off of copyrighted material, couldn’t they?

            • jacksilver@lemmy.world
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              5 months ago

              It’s not a topic that I’m super well versed in, but here is a thread from a photography forum indicating that news organizations can’t take advantage of fair use https://www.dpreview.com/forums/thread/4183940.

              I think these kinds of stringent rules are why so many are up in arms about how AI is being used. It’s effectively a way for big players to circumvent paying the people who out all the work into the art/music/voice acting/etc. The models would be nothing without the copyrighted material, yet no one seems to want to pay those people.

              It gets more interesting when you realize that long term we still need people creating lots of content if we want these models to be able to create things around concepts that don’t yet exist (new characters, genres of music, etc.)

        • dragontamer@lemmy.world
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          5 months ago

          But where is the infringement?

          Do Training weights have the data? Are the servers copying said data on a mass scale, in a way that the original copyrighters don’t want or can’t control?

          • abhibeckert@lemmy.world
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            5 months ago

            Do Training weights have the data?

            The answer to that question is extensively documented by thousands of research papers - it’s not up for debate.

          • orclev@lemmy.world
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            5 months ago

            Data is not copyrighted, only the image is. Furthermore you can not copyright a number, even though you could use a sufficiently large number to completely represent a specific image. There’s also the fact that copyright does not protect possession of works, only distribution of them. If I obtained a copyrighted work no matter the means chosen to do so, I’ve committed no crime so long as I don’t duplicate that work. This gets into a legal grey area around computers and the fundamental way they work, but it was already kind of fuzzy if you really think about it anyway. Does viewing a copyrighted image violate copyright? The visual data of that image has been copied into your brain. You have the memory of that image. If you have the talent you could even reproduce that copyrighted work so clearly a copy of it exists in your brain.

            • dragontamer@lemmy.world
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              only distribution of them.

              Yeah. And the hard drives and networks that pass Midjourney’s network weights around?

              That’s distribution. Did Midjourney obtain a license from the artists to allow large numbers of “Joker” copyrighted data to be copied on a ton of servers in their data-center so that Midjourney can run? They’re clearly letting the public use this data.

              • orclev@lemmy.world
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                5 months ago

                Because they’re not copying around images of Joker, they’re copying around a work derived from many many things including images of Joker. Copying a derived work does not violate the copyright of the work it was derived from. The wrinkle in this case is that you can extract something very similar to the original works back out of the derived work after the fact. It would be like if you could bake a cake, pass it around, and then down the line pull a whole egg back out of it. Maybe not the exact egg you started with, but one very similar to it. This is a situation completely unlike anything that’s come before it which is why it’s not actually covered by copyright. New laws will need to be drafted (or at a bare minimum legal judgements made) to decide how exactly this situation should be handled.

                • dragontamer@lemmy.world
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                  5 months ago

                  derived

                  https://www.law.cornell.edu/wex/derivative_work

                  Copyrights allow their owners to decide how their works can be used, including creating new derivative works off of the original product. Derivative works can be created with the permission of the copyright owner or from works in the public domain. In order to receive copyright protection, a derivative work must add a sufficient amount of change to the original work.

                  Are you just making shit up?

                • archomrade [he/him]@midwest.social
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                  5 months ago

                  Someone already downvoted you but this is exactly the topic of debate surrounding this issue.

                  Other recognized fair-use exemptions have similar interpretations: a computer model analyzes a large corpus of copyrighted work for the purposes of being able to search their contents and retrieve relevant snippets and works based on semantic and abstract similarities. The computer model that is the representation of those works for that purpose is fair use: it contains only factual information about those works. It doesn’t matter if the works used for that model were unlicensed: the model is considered fair use.

                  AI models operate by a very similar method, albeit one with a lot more complexity. But the model doesn’t contain copyrighted works, it is only itself a collection of factual information about the copyrighted works. The novel part of this case is that it can be used to re-construct expressions very similar to the original (it should be pointed out that the fidelity is often very low, and the more detailed the output the less like the original it becomes). It isn’t settled yet if that fact changes this interpretation, but regardless I think copyright is already not the right avenue to pursue, if the goal is to remediate or prevent harm to creators and encourage novel expressions.

          • Auli@lemmy.ca
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            5 months ago

            There response well be we don’t know we can’t understand what its doing.

            • dragontamer@lemmy.world
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              There response well be we don’t know we can’t understand what its doing.

              What the fuck is this kind of response? Its just a fucking neural network running on GPUs with convolutional kernels. For fucks sake, turn on your damn brain.

              Generative AI is actually one of the easier subjects to comprehend here. Its just calculus. Use of derivatives to backpropagate weights in such a way that minimizes error. Lather-rinse-repeat for a billion iterations on a mass of GPUs (ie: 20 TFlop compute systems) for several weeks.

              Come on, this stuff is well understood by Comp. Sci by now. Not only 20 years ago when I learned about this stuff, but today now that AI is all hype, more and more people are understanding the basics.

              • Mirodir@discuss.tchncs.de
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                5 months ago

                Understanding the math behind it doesn’t immediately mean understanding the decision progress during forward propagation. Of course you can mathematically follow it, but you’re quickly gonna lose the overview with that many weights. There’s a reason XAI is an entire subfield in Machine Learning.

      • rsuri@lemmy.world
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        5 months ago

        But its not like our laws have changed

        And that’s the problem. The internet has drastically reduced the cost of copying information, to the point where entirely new uses like this one are now possible. But those new uses are stifled by copyright law that originates from a time when the only cost was that people with gutenberg presses would be prohibited from printing slightly cheaper books. And there’s no discussion of changing it because the people who benefit from those laws literally are the media.

      • orclev@lemmy.world
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        5 months ago

        Wasn’t that known? Have midjourney ever claimed they didn’t use copyrighted works? There’s also an ongoing argument about the legality of that in general. One recent court case ruled that copyright does not protect a work from being used to train an AI. I’m sure that’s far from the final word on the topic, but it does mean this is a legal grey area at the moment.

        • dragontamer@lemmy.world
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          If it is known, then it is copyright infringement to download the training sets and therefore a crime to do so. You cannot reproduce a copy of the works without the express permission of the copyright holder.

          How many computers did Midjourney copy its training weights to? Has Midjourney (and the IT team behind it) paid royalties for every copyrighted image in its training set to have a proper copyright license to copy all of this data from computer to computer?

          I’m guessing no. Which means the Midjourney team (if you say is true) is committing copyright infringement every time they spin up a new server with these weights.


          Pro-AI side will obviously argue that the training weights do not contain the data of these copyrighted works. A claim that is looking more-and-more laughable as these experiments happen.

          • db0@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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            5 months ago

            No it’s not illegal to download publicly available content it’s a copyright violation to republish it.

      • orclev@lemmy.world
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        5 months ago

        If the training data is obviously copyright infringement, then the data must be retrained in a more appropriate manner.

        This is the crux of the issue, it isn’t obviously copyright infringement. Currently copyright is completely silent on the matter one way or another.

        The thing that makes this particularly interesting is that the traditional copyright maximalists, the ones responsible for ballooning copyright durations from its original reasonable limit of 14 years (plus one renewal) to its current absurd duration of 95 years, also stand to benefit greatly from generative works. Instead of the usual full court press we tend to see from the major corporations around anything copyright related we’re instead seeing them take a rather hands off approach.

        • dragontamer@lemmy.world
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          5 months ago

          This is the crux of the issue, it isn’t obviously copyright infringement. Currently copyright is completely silent on the matter one way or another.

          Its clear that the training weights have the data on recreating this Joker scene. Its also clear that if the training-data didn’t contain this image, then the copy of the image would never result into the weights that have been copy/pasted everywhere.

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            5 months ago

            Except it isn’t a perfect copy. It’s very similar, but not exact. Additionally for every example you can find where it spits out a nearly identical image you can also find one where it produces nothing like it. Even more complicated you can get images generated that very closely match other copyrighted works, but which the model was never trained on. Does that mean copying the model violates the copyright of a work that it literally couldn’t have included in its data?

            You’re making a lot of assumptions and arguments that copyright covers things that it very much does not cover or at a minimum that it hasn’t (yet) been ruled to cover.

            Legally, as things currently stand, an AI model trained on a copyrighted work is not a copy of that work as far as copyright is concerned. That’s today’s legal reality. That might change in the future, but that’s far from certain, and is a far more nuanced and complicated problem than you’re making it out to be.

            Any legal decision that ruled an AI model is a copy of all the works used to train it would also likely have very far reaching and complicated ramifications. That’s why this needs to be argued out in court, but until then what midjourney is doing is perfectly legal.

            • dragontamer@lemmy.world
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              5 months ago

              https://www.law.cornell.edu/wex/derivative_work

              Copyrights allow their owners to decide how their works can be used, including creating new derivative works off of the original product. Derivative works can be created with the permission of the copyright owner or from works in the public domain. In order to receive copyright protection, a derivative work must add a sufficient amount of change to the original work.

              The law is very clear on the nature of derivative works of copyrighted material.

              • orclev@lemmy.world
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                5 months ago

                Not sure where they’re getting the bit about copyright disallowing derived works as that’s just not true. You can get permission to create a derived work, but you don’t need permission to create a derived work so long as the final result does not substantially consist of the original work.

                Unfortunately what constitutes “substantially” is somewhat vague. Various rulings have been made around that point, but I believe a common figure used is 30%. By that metric any given image represents substantially less than 30% of any AI model so the model itself is a perfectly legal derived work with its own copyright separate from the various works that were combined to create it.

                Ultimately though the issue here is that the wrong tool is being used, copyright just doesn’t cover this case, it’s just what people are most familiar with (not to mention most people are very poorly educated about it) so that’s what everyone reaches for by default.

                With generative AI what we have is a tool that can be used to trivially produce works that are substantially similar to existing copyrighted works. In this regard it’s less like a photocopier, and more like Photoshop, but with the critical difference that no particular talent is necessary to create the reproduction. Because it’s so easy to use people keep focusing on trying to kill the tool rather than trying to police the people using it. But they’re going about it all wrong, copyright isn’t the right weapon if that’s your goal. Copyright can be used to go after the people using generative AI tools, but not the people creating the tools.

                • dragontamer@lemmy.world
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                  5 months ago

                  Because it’s so easy to use people keep focusing on trying to kill the tool rather than trying to police the people using it. But they’re going about it all wrong, copyright isn’t the right weapon if that’s your goal. Copyright can be used to go after the people using generative AI tools, but not the people creating the tools.

                  Why? If the training weights are created and distributed in violation of copyright laws, it seems appropriate to punish those illegal training weights.

                  In fact, all that people really are asking for, is for a new set of training weights to be developed but with appropriate copyright controls. IE: With express permission from the artists and/or entities who made the work.

  • ombremad@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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    5 months ago

    I don’t know why everybody pretends we need to come up with a bunch of new laws to protect artists and copyright against “AI”. The problem isn’t AI. The problem is data scraping.

    An example: Apple’s iOS allows you to record your own voice in order to make it a full speech synthesis, that you can use within the system. It’s currently tooted as an accessibility feature (like, if you have a disability preventing you from speaking out loud all of the time, you can use your phone to speak on your behalf, with your own custom voice). In this case, you provide the data, and the AI processes it on-device over night. Simple. We could also think about an artist making a database of their own works in order to try and come up with new ideas with quick prompts, in their own style.

    However, right now, a lot of companies are building huge databases by scraping data from everywhere without consent from the artists that, most of the time, don’t even know their work was scraped. And they even dare to advise that publicly, pretend they have a right to do that, sell those services. That’s stealing of intellectual property, always has been, always will be. You don’t need new laws to get it right. You might need better courts in order to enforce it, depending on which country you live in.

    There’s legal use of AI, and unlawful use of AI. If you use what belongs to you and use the computer as a generative tool to make more things out of it: AI good. If you take from others what don’t belong to you in order to generate stuff based on it: AI bad. Thanks for listening to my TED talk.

  • 8000mark@discuss.tchncs.de
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    5 months ago

    I think AI in this case is doing exactly what it’s best at: Automating unbelievably boring chores on the basis of past “experiences”. In this case the boring chore was “Draw me [insert character name] just how I know him/her”.

    Too many people mistakenly assume generative AI is originative or imaginative. It’s not. It certainly can seem that way because it can transform human ideas and words into a picture that has ideally never before existed and that notion is very powerful. But we have to accept that, until now, human creativity is unique to us, the humans. As far as I can tell, the authors were not trying to prove generative AI is unimaginative, they were showing just how blatant copyright infringement in the context of generative AI is happening. No more, no less.

  • KeenFlame@feddit.nu
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    5 months ago

    You asked “AI”, not a specific model that is trained on this image with the exact parameters and knowledge needed to recreate it exactly?cool

  • afraid_of_zombies@lemmy.world
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    5 months ago

    Get rid of copyright law. It only benefits the biggest content owners and deprives the rest of us of our own culture.

    It says so much that the person who created an image can be bared from making it.

  • Jilanico@lemmy.world
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    5 months ago

    I already know I’m going to be downvoted all to hell, but just putting it out there that neural networks aren’t just copy pasting. If a talented artist replicates a picture of the joker almost perfectly, they are applauded. If an AI does it, that’s bad? Why are humans allowed to be “inspired” by copyrighted material, but AIs aren’t?

    • Auli@lemmy.ca
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      5 months ago

      Because AI isn’t inspired to do anything it has no feelings its just code.

      • Jilanico@lemmy.world
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        5 months ago

        That’s why I put inspired in quotes. It’s analogous to a human seeing something on the Internet and coming up with similar art or building upon it.

        • jacksilver@lemmy.world
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          5 months ago

          To me the tipping point is if someone is getting paid. You can be inspired by the joker character and make your own content/characters that are similar, but you can’t just start making iterations of the joker and selling it for money (legally at least).

          With Gen AI, companies are selling access to models that can and are being used to generate copyrighted material. Meaning these companies are making money off of something they didn’t create and don’t own.

          If it’s an open sourced model, then I don’t care, but I think there is a problem when these models can take others work and charge money for it.

          • Jilanico@lemmy.world
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            5 months ago

            I think the onus is on the user of the AI. I could use Photoshop to make a joker pic and sell it for money. Should Photoshop be banned? The AI lets me do the same thing faster.

            • jacksilver@lemmy.world
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              5 months ago

              And that’s probably we’re things will land, but it is an interesting grey area to determine how much can the tool generate vs the person. Maybe it’s a glimpse into the challenges of a post scarcity or post ai world.

    • QubaXR@lemmy.world
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      5 months ago

      Because the original Joker design is not just something that occurred in nature, out of nowhere. It was created by another artist(s) who don’t get credit or compensation for their work.

      When YouTube “essayists” cobble script together by copy pasting paragraphs and changing some words around and then then earn money off the end product with zero attribution, we all agree it’s wrong. Corporations doing the same to images are no different.

      • LainTrain@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        5 months ago

        So you watched that Hbomberguy video where he randomly tacked on being wrong about AI in every way, using unsourced, uncited claims that have nothing to do with Somerton or that Illuminaughti chick and will age extremely poorly and made that your entire worldview? Okay

      • null@slrpnk.net
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        5 months ago

        But of course you can’t turn around and sell that picture of the Joker that you made. That’s obvious.

        • QubaXR@lemmy.world
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          5 months ago

          The problem in here is that while the Joker is a pretty recognizable cultural icon, somebody using an AI may have genuinely original idea for an image that just happens to have been independently developed by someone before. As a result, the AI can produce an image that’s a copy or close reproduction of an original artwork without disclosing its similarity to the source material. The new “author” then will unknowingly rip off the original.

          The prompts to reproduce joker and other superhero movies were quite specific, but asking for “Animated Sponge” is pretty innocent. It is not unthinkable that someone may not be familiar with Mr. Squarepants and think they developed an original character using AI

          • null@slrpnk.net
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            5 months ago

            This might be the best point I’ve seen around this topic – have not seen this addressed before.

          • QuadratureSurfer@lemmy.world
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            5 months ago

            It’s on the person using any AI tools to verify that they aren’t infringing on anything if they try to market/sell something generated by these tools.

            That goes for using ChatGPT just as much as it goes for Midjourney/Dall-E 3, tools that create music, etc.

            And you’re absolutely right, this is going to be a problem more and more for anyone using AI Tools and I’m curious to see how that will factor in to future lawsuits.

            I could see some new factor for fair use being raised in court, or else taking this into account under one of the pre-existing factors.

          • Jilanico@lemmy.world
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            5 months ago

            That’s a good point. Musicians have been known to accidentally reproduce the same beat as another musician (was is done subconsciously or just coincidence?). Some books are strikingly similar to other books that it makes you wonder if it was a rip off or just coincidence. So it’s nothing new, but it may become more prevalent with AI. This could spawn a new industry of investigators ensuring your AI generated art isn’t infringing on any copyrights 🤔

      • sir_reginald@lemmy.world
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        5 months ago

        you aren’t making any sense. people did fanarts and memes of the joker movie like crazy, they were all over the internet. there are tons and tons of fan arts of copyrighted material.

        they fall under fair use and no one losses money because fan arts can’t be used for commercial purposes, that would fall outside fair use and copyright holders will sue, of course.

        how is that different from the AI generating an image containing copyrighted material? if someone started generating images of the joker and then selling them, yeah, sue the fuck out of them. but generating it without any commercial purpose is not illegal at all.

        • QubaXR@lemmy.world
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          5 months ago

          In many cases the AI company is “selling you” the image by making users pay for the use of the generator. Sure, there are free options, too - but just giving you an example.

          • barsoap@lemm.ee
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            5 months ago

            With that line of argument you can sue developers of 2d painting programmes and producers of graphics tablets. And producers of canvas, brushes and paint. Maybe even the landlord for renting out a studio? It’s all means of production.

            • jpeps@lemmy.world
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              5 months ago

              You make an interesting point, but I can’t help but feel it’s not completely the same and you’re reaching a bit. I feel like it’d be closer if GIMP, next to shape tools for squares and circles, literally had a ‘Joaquin Phoenix as the Joker’ shape. The crux of the issue as I see it in this part of the legal debate is whether or not AI companies are willing participants in the creation of potentially copyright infringing media.

              It reminds me a bit of the debate around social media platforms and if they’re legally responsible for the illegal or inappropriate content people keep uploading.

      • Jilanico@lemmy.world
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        5 months ago

        Tons of human made art isn’t inspired by nature. Rather it’s inspired by other human made art. Neural networks don’t just copy paste like a yt plagiarist. You can ask an AI to plagiarize but no guarantee it’ll get it right.

        • QubaXR@lemmy.world
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          5 months ago

          I think the problem is that you cannot ask AI not to plagiarize. I love the potential of AI and use it a lot in my sketching and ideation work. I am very wary of publicly publishing a lot of it though, since, especially recently, the models seem to be more and more at ease producing ethically questionable content.

          • Jilanico@lemmy.world
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            5 months ago

            That’s an interesting point. We’re forced to make a judgement call because we don’t have total control over what it generates.