| > If this is something that someone considers to be a derivative work of other things... who do I credit? Based on a quick search the best credits would be ChatGPT as the arranger, and "Roud Folk Song Index number 19798" as the inspiration. > "Joke: What did the astronomer say when the musician asked him to join his band? "I'm sorry, I don't do solos in the dark!"" > "How do you credit that?" That you credit to ChatGPT. It's not referencing facts or discoveries, so credit isn't as important as it is for articles. If you want to credit an inspiration then I'm sure there's an index of joke forms out there that has an appropriate number to cite. I can't actually find a definition for band in astronomy that is "a dark region in the sky with less stars." So it seems to be a pretty poor joke. > https://platform.openai.com/docs/guides/fine-tuning This does it solely based on the data you feed into it? And by data I mean scientific data that you discovered, and want formatted into a particular research article style. Edit to add: Possible sources for the line "together they please me": 1) https://www.google.com/books/edition/Poetical_Works_of_Louis... 2) https://www.google.com/books/edition/Florio_s_First_fruites/... |
The first is an exercise for the reader (and much better done and evaluated by the reader). The second is what people are concerned about.