| > If he’s mad at that wait till he sees what the cp command does! in order for that analogy to even remotely be applicable, midjourney would have to be a program you run on your own computer and not a service running on midjourney's computers that does what you ask it to. > In all seriousness, midjourney is like any other tool. You can break the law with it, big surprise. It should still be on the person that broke the law, not the makers of the tool. that would be midjourney, since they're both the creators and operators of their model. > If you go down the “can’t use my art as training data” how far do you push it? I watched Batman, does that mean if I draw caped super heroes I am stealing training data? Wouldn’t that apply to all comics after Superman? Isn’t he guilty of derivative work himself? you just called AI "a tool", that's why it's different. > Also, nobody is being harmed by this. AI is always derivative. Nobody is interested in copies or impressions of popular art, otherwise the guy selling animes on velvet at the local art fair would be making more money. This just sounds like a Luddite shaking his fist at this perceived enemy. that's an argument against IP law in general, not an argument against holding companies which create and operate deep-learning models to the same standards as everybody else. |
So your argument is that the tool running remotely as a service somehow makes it different from one running on your local computer?
So if someone copies the contents of a novel into Google Docs, Google is liable for their copyright infringement, but if they paste it into Word running on their computer, all of the liability is on them?
At what point does the liability shift? What if all of the functionality is implemented in JavaScript in the browser, rather than running on someone else's server?
What if they run all but the last layer of the model on the server, then finish the computation locally?
I don't think the situation is nearly as cut and dry as you make it out to be.