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by andrekandre
1216 days ago
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> First, that's not the right legal standard. The standard is whether there is a "modicum of creativity," not whether Kris could "predict what Midjourney [would] create ahead of time." In other words, the Office incorrectly focused on the output of the tool rather than the input from the human.
if the input is a prompt that anyone can write.... for example if i wrote "elephant with blue skin" into midjourney and someone else also did, and we get exactly the same image or a totally different image, it doesnt matter does it?how does "elephant with blue skin" or any other prompt meet the criteria of 'modicum of creativity'? in the end, its the tool that is doing the heavy lifting and being able to copyright its output sounds against the spirit of copyright (allow a human to get proper compensation for their creative work and incentivize creativity) imo. is there something obvious i am missing? |
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Pressing the button, on an already setup camera, is something that anyone can do as well, and they will get the exact same camera output as anyone else.