• jarfil@beehaw.org
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    1 年前

    My bet is: it’s going to depend on a case by case basis.

    A large enough neural network can be used to store, and then recover, a 1:1 copy of a work… but a large enough corpus can contain more data that could ever be stored in a given size neural network, even if some fragments of the input work could be recovered… so it will depend on how big of a recoverable fragment is “big enough” to call it copyright infringement… but then again, reproducing up to a whole work is considered fair use for some purposes… but not in every country.

    Copyright laws are not necessarily wrong; just remove the “until author’s death plus 70 years” coverage, go back to a more reasonable “4 years since publication”, and they make much more sense.

    • knotthatone@lemmy.one
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      1 年前

      My bet is: it’s going to depend on a case by case basis.

      Almost certainly. Getty images has several exhibits in its suit against Stable Diffusion showing the Getty watermark popping up in its output as well as several images that are substantially the same as their sources. Other generative models don’t produce anything all that similar to the source material, so we’re probably going to wind up with lots of completely different and likely contradictory rulings on the matter before this gets anywhere near being sorted out legally.

      Copyright laws are not necessarily wrong; just remove the “until author’s death plus 70 years” coverage, go back to a more reasonable “4 years since publication”, and they make much more sense.

      The trouble with that line of thinking is that the laws are under no obligation to make sense. And the people who write and litigate those laws benefit from making them as complicated and irrational as they can get away with.

      • jarfil@beehaw.org
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        1 年前

        In this case the Mickey Mouse Curve makes sense, just bad sense. At least the EU didn’t make it 95 years, and compromised on also 70… 🙄