|
|
|
|
|
by falcolas
1258 days ago
|
|
Copyright (see the copious evidence that training is not respecting copyrights or licenses across the latest commercial machine learning algorithms). The same law you brought up? Laws which are written into national treaties? Regardless of your beliefs about copyright and how it should be changed (or abolished), it is not just the law of the land, it is the law of the world. |
|
That's slightly different. Just because an AI model is capable of plagarism, that's a factor that emerges from usage. The act of training a model hasn't currently been judged to be illegal and neither as far as I know (at least in most jurisdictions) has the initial data gathering.
Creating output that infringes on someone elses copyright is obviously problemmatic and few would argue otherwise. But that isn't a problem specific to AI.