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by soonerroadie 1814 days ago
If you read something that is copyrighted and rewrite it from memory, that’s still copying for purposes of the copyright act. There are cases about music where that’s unintentionally happened and the inadvertent copier was held liable. It’s basically what the machine learning is doing. Committing something to memory is no defense to copyright - I would recon a good number of people could recite any number of copyrighted works from memory (e.g., episodes of The Office, Seinfeld, or popular songs). If a person wrote that down and tried to sell it, I’m convinced a court would hold that person liable. There is a defense of “independent creation,” but basically if you saw/heard the copyrighted work before then it’s very hard to use that as a defense.