| > intent is not a required factor for establishing copyright violation. What you mean to say is that if someone just so happens to write a story that is significantly similar to another work that their intent doesn't matter... most importantly their intent is unknowable. This doesn't mean that courts will not be interested in the intended use of specific mechanical tools such as VCRs, computers, and statistical models. Let's tease apart this "zip file containing Mickey Mouse photos" because it seems to be from where your errors in reasoning stem. Here is a website that gives you instructions on how to draw Mickey Mouse: https://courses.cs.duke.edu/cps004/fall01/examples/mickey/St... These instructions are not violation of copyright because they draw a picture of Mickey Mouse. Copyright does not protect the mere existence of an image. Copyright gives a monopoly on distributing copies of that image to the rights holder. Not the idea of the image, not the instructions that could lead to the image, not the 1s and 0s that make up the image. As I've mentioned before, a t-shirt with the 1s and 0s that make up the zip file that contains those photos is not in violation of copyrights on those images. You'll notice that CafePress still has t-shirts with the DeCSS code for sale: https://www.cafepress.com/+,954530397 Imagine a mathematical formula that when plotted in polar coordinates draws Mickey Mouse. The mathematical formula is a fact and it cannot be copyrighted. There's another step required for copyright infringement: Someone renders the image and distributes copies of the rendered image. |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sony_Corp._of_America_v._Unive....
Take a note of the majority opinion in the Supreme Court ruling:
> The question is thus whether the Betamax is capable of commercially significant noninfringing uses ... one potential use of the Betamax plainly satisfies this standard, however it is understood: private, noncommercial time-shifting in the home.[7] [...] [W]hen one considers the nature of a televised copyrighted audiovisual work... and that time-shifting merely enables a viewer to see such a work which he had been invited to witness in its entirety free of charge, the fact... that the entire work is reproduced... does not have its ordinary effect of militating against a finding of fair use.
Stable Diffusion is also capable of commercially significant non-infringing uses. It is to be expected that the lower courts will continue to follow the precedence set by the Supreme Court that there is a clear distinction between a mechanical device capable of making copies and the distribution of those copies.
To put in the context of Stable Diffusion, this is why legal experts keep saying there are two things to consider: The model, which is almost guaranteed to be protected by fair use, and the outputs of the model, in which the users of the model are liable for any copyright infringement.