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The AI-focused COPIED Act would make removing digital watermarks illegal (as well as training any kind of AI on copyrighted content)
  • Did I see a sportsball event? I can talk about it to whom I want when I want.

    Sure.

    Did I buy a physical book? I can take as many photos of it as I want.

    Nope. You can't, for example, take a picture of all the pages and then redistribute those.

    Now answer my question if you plan to go after another Daycare, Disney. No more evasions

    Only if you tell me whether or not you stopped beating your wife.

    What part is confusing you exactly?

    I initially thought you were ignorant of the core principle of intellectual property, but now I see you're just wilfully delusional.

  • The AI-focused COPIED Act would make removing digital watermarks illegal (as well as training any kind of AI on copyrighted content)
  • Quite the contrary, actually. Thanks to this law you won't have to watermark something you own, in order to prevent companies to use it for profit.

    Unless of course you have the misconception that downloading something that someone else made is the same as owning it. In which case, I understand this might be difficult for you to grasp.

  • Tool preventing AI mimicry cracked; artists wonder what’s next
  • Not OP, but I also don't think it's the same thing. But even if it were, the consequences are nowhere near the same.

    A person might be able to learn to replicate an artist's style, given enough practice and patience, but it would take them a long time, and the most "damage" they could do with that, is create new content at roughly the same rate as the original creator.

    It would take an AI infinitely less time to acquire that same skill, and infinitely less time to then create that content. So given those factors, I think there's an enormous difference between 1 person learning to copy your skill, or a company that does it as a business model.

    Btw, if you didn't know it yet - search engines don't need to create a large language model in order to find web content. They've been working fine (one night even say Better) without doing that.

  • 'The Last of Us' Was the Most-Pirated Show of 2023
  • This actual data is not necessarily representative of the entire situation

    You keep saying that, but never back it up with any reason.

    Everyone here agrees the data is incomplete, but that it's the best data we have. Only you keep implying that it's incorrect because [ever less verifiable, unspecified reasons]. Holy hypocrisy, batman.

  • Authors Are Furious After Finding Their Works on List of Books Used To Train AI
  • You're missing the point. I'll make your example more specific.

    Well when fraud/rape/murder happens we have laws. So no problems.

    Those things happen. Creating a LLM based on copyrighted material without permission happens - it's not a hypothetical. But even then, giving a punishment after the fact does not make the initial crime "no problem", as you put it.

  • InitialsDiceBearhttps://github.com/dicebear/dicebearhttps://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/„Initials” (https://github.com/dicebear/dicebear) by „DiceBear”, licensed under „CC0 1.0” (https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/)SA
    sab @lemmy.world
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