There’s been this weird idea lately, even among people who used to recognize that copyright only empowers the largest gatekeepers, that in the AI world we have to magically flip the script on copyr…
It is missing one point: as a creator, I want to be able to forbid you from training on my creations. And the only tool that could enable that is the copyright enforcement over AI training.
If there was an opt out system that was actually respected then this wouldn’t be a problem. But as it stands, artists have no control over if their work is used for NN training.
I don’t want my work used to train models, which should be a completely valid stance to have. Open Source or not really doesn’t matter in the grand scheme of it.
Painters replicate variations of their training pieces too. You're pretending there's a difference between human inspired and training inspired and that you should get paid for that inspiration in one case just cuz "big corp"
Because there is a difference. A computer does not learn or understand anything. Human beings can transform a concept. A LLM or other generative AI does not transform a concept at all.
So if I ask it to create a story about a cow juggling bowling balls, it was not creating an original story? Just spitting out stories it has heard of before?
It’s spitting out variations of the statistical results based on your input parameter. It reorganizes ideas and reorganizes the stories it has seen into something else. That’s not transforming the data by adding something new, rather just retrofitting existing data to sound like it’s creating something new
retrofitting existing data to sound like it’s creating something new.
What the difference? That is basically how new human ideas are formed. Did you think you add completely new ideas everytime you transform your previous knowledge?
But since you're so confident in your claims, I'm sure it should be easy to prove the following ChatGPT output is not new and can be easily traced back to its training data:
Prompt: Create a short poem about a cow juggling bowling balls on a boat
Output: In a boat on gentle waves it sways,
A cow, not grazing in greenish bays.
Hooves deftly juggle, balls in flight,
Bowling orbs, a whimsical sight.
Bovine artist, on the sea's embrace,
Balancing spheres with tranquil grace.
Ocean breeze, a playful gale,
A cow's performance, a quirky tale.
No, statistical next word prediction was the first step, and you could get it to spit out bits of training data, but we're so far beyond that now with LLMs.
I've been doing a lot with llama derivative models that I talk with, I use them for tasks but also just bounce ideas off them or chat. They're very different when you run them with a task vs feed in a prompt and multi-turn conversation.
Mine have a very strong tendency, when asked the name of a hallucinated friend or family member to name her Luna or fluffy. It's present in the base llama2, as well as some of the fine-turned versions I'm using now.
Why? That's not training data - they're not uncommon as pet names, but there's no way they show up often referring to sapient beings (which is the context they're brought up in).
It's an artifact of some sort for sure, but that is not a statistically likely next word choice based on training data.
I could talk about this all day and it gets so much weirder, but I'll give you another story. They like to play, but their world is text, and I like to see what comes out of the models when you "yes, and" them while avoiding leading questions.
Some games they've made up... Hide and seek (they're usually in the second place you Guess), and my favorite - find the coma (and the related find the missing semicolon).
WTF even is that? It's the kind of simplistic "game" a child makes up as they experiment with moving beyond mimicry to generalizing, and the fact that it's coherent and has an appropriate answer is pretty amazing.
These LLMs aren't just statistics, there's a nascent internal model of the world that you get glimpses of if you tell it it's a person and feed its outputs back into itself. I was pretty dismissive of the "sparks of AGI" comment when it was made, but a few months of hands on interaction has totally flipped my opinion of where these are at
My bad, I suppose I should have gone further down my line of reasoning. I am well aware of the differences between what generative AI does and what human artists do.
Do you think artists should be allowed to categorize other artists work so that when they want inspiration on how to draw mouths, they can quickly look through and see a bunch of other artists mouths to get inspiration from? (So they can then draw their own mouths)
Should they be allowed to use AI to help them do this identification and categorization?
Should they be allowed to use AI to create new mouths based on the collection they have amassed so they can get inspiration from these never before seen mouths?
Does it make any difference if they have created this identifying/categorizing AI themself?
If they take this combination of AI that they created and these images that they collected, and the resulting AI inspiration mouths that they have produced, should they be allowed to alter them to suit the unique face that they are making? Or is the fact that they combined what people currently call "AI" with other people's work enough to make it against the rules?
What if they made the AI and never plugged in anyone else's mouths, should they be allowed to use that AI to make their work?
Where exactly is the line at that people should not be allowed to cross?
I know there are lots of questions here, I totally understand if you don't have time or answers for them. I'm just kind of laying out why I see not nearly as clear of a line as some people/headlines would like to have everyone think there is.
The AI companies shown that they are incapable of regulating themselves on this topic, and so people with art at stake should force their hand.
Open source or not doesn't matter here, what matters is the copyright. If even Disney can defend works they own (whatever their ethics), so should anyone else.
100% agreement from me again. Non-artists don’t have anything at stake, so they’re perfectly happy with the established copyright rules are demolished. People keep countering with the open source idea, which completely misses the entire point of our arguments. A model being open source does not excuse the stealing of training data.
IMO individual copyright should be strengthened and corporate copyright weakened, but that’d be next to impossible to pass.
That's exactly what's at stake, waiting to be sufficiently litigated. And I hope that creators will win, and that they would be able to tell if they allow richest big tech companies in the world to train on their creations.
Likewise, I hope they don't win, as that will give the richest tech companies so much more of a stranglehold.
I doubt there's any chance of it happening anyway, since there's a ton of money to be made and and there's already countries which have rules this will never happen (Like Japan ), so it would mean they become the AI powerhouses
And I want a law making you pay me 500$ for reading your posts.
Copyright law already extends beyond what society finds reasonable. It's routinely broken by normal people without them even thinking about it. It's even broken by those vested in it both corporations and individual artists.
Finally you are not getting the copyright law you want ( nor should you, you a minority, a special interest ), big corps are. They might be 'content' corps or tech or both but they certainly won't make a law to benefit either society as a whole or you as a small artist.