| > Legally, diffusion models learn from work rather than copying any specific piece, and copyright does not protect a style or give artists the right to retroactively restrict learning from open content. Unless you are a lawyer you are just pulling reasoning out of thin air. All aspects of Copyright with human's have been decided by decades of court cases. Assuming you understand the underlying theory enough to guess how a court case would go is presumptuous. > Ethically, our society accepts legally automating people out of jobs And society accepts paying people for their work. > There are winners and losers, that’s capitalism, for better or worse. Capitalism is all about avoiding paying for what you did in order to artificially increase your profits, I agree there. > I am sorry for artists and think we should probably have a subsidy for human creativity I mean if the AI models just... Trained on purchased or free materials there wouldn't be a problem. Other media figured out how to handle when a "purchase" isn't a purchase in the traditional fashion: see streaming services. AI art is just the latest version of piracy. "It is just bytes" yet again. |
They're not copying, they're doing the equivalent of looking at thousands of paintings and from that figuring out what paintings are supposed to look like. If you were asked to draw something in the style of Picasso and did so, would your new art work be a copyright violation?
Is every painting you've ever seen public domain? Have you ever got an idea or influence from a non public domain artwork?