Do you make a living off your code's likeness? That is, is there a wholesomepotato device, like Duff's or Not John Carmack's fast inverse square root, that's immediately recognizable as having been created by you, and you get paid for its appearance on late night tv shows and in movies?
copilots whole job is to make code look like it functions... arguably, that's entirely what these systems do.
the AI isn't doing fundamentals in programming anymore than it's putting on makeup to look like an actress.
if you go out and find a woman whose shaped like her, get a makeup artist and a costume designer and put together a simulacrum ... that's also illegal right?
anyway, it's pretty difficult to judge one as being ethically dubious and the other as hand wavy concern trolling.
The system cannot be compromised by a developer retracting their code from the machine. A developer cannot be allowed authority over the machine. Code is powerful, unlike ScarJo's likeness.
Knowledge workers are permanently forced to lose control of their own labour.
if your code contributed to any AI project, it sure must suck because I rarely get code from any AI that runs on the first try. If it was verbatim, which is the only claim that is valid, shouldn't it work every time? How do you define the "likeness" of a codebase, and someone duplicating that at least stylistically, and how would that accusation be defended in court?
Yeah, that too depending on what you mean. Just don't get carried away claiming things like "They saw I have a head and now the people in the generated ads have heads too" or "my code showed how to use parts of the Box2D library and their code does too" are the same type of issue as "they used my public data to impersonate me" or "my code is being stolen". Maybe you want to argue the latter things are still problematic but no amount of pointing it out in situations like this achieves that.