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by joshgree88 1807 days ago
Oh yeah of course - I am sure they have multiple legal arguments and different ones will be deployed based on how they are legally challenged - I doubt very much they didn't see this coming - but at its heart I think MS are confident they can get away with it...
1 comments

Like any criminal. The risk of getting caught and punished is balanced against the potential reward. They know the courts can be gamed long enough to make more money than it will cost them. This is the essential nature of business at their scale. Uber, AirBnb, and now Copilot: screw the law, there’s profit to be made.
You point out one of the bigger problems with the whole entire giant corporation situation we have today. What is even the point of enforcing laws against those who can simply ignore the law until it's enforced (making massive profits along the way), then pay up, and still come out the other side massively enriched from their crime?

As long as enforcement and punishment of corporate lawbreakers doesn't hurt them at all, they're gonna continue to find new ways to abuse the system and get away with it. Only way to change it is to make their crimes really hurt them when they're called to task over it.

Reading this chain of comments made me think: What if Copilot was a purely academic creation. Imagine a bunch of computer scientists from ETH Zürich created something identical. Would we be having the same debate? I'm not sure.

And yes, I do agree that some tech companies push the boundary of information and commercial law and wait to be tested by someone with deep pockets.

We absolutely would if their plan was then to produce a paid for product of the backs of all the people who unknowingly contributed - if say they were to release the model and the training corpus in its entirety then nope...