| They are completely different things. I send my research to Elsevier for free, and surrender all my publishing rights & copyright to Elsevier to be able to publish it. When/if it's published, I have a paltry "author's copy" in return, which I have to be very diligent while giving copies of it away, otherwise Elsevier might punish me. At the end, it's a paper which bears my name, but I have none of the rights attached to it, and Elsevier gets literally millions of dollars from each country which licenses its publications. Their expenses are a mere rounding error for what they charge, and they are doing this to protect their income, not my research. Copyright infringement / ethical issues in AI is something else: Crawlers reap & providers sell my data without my consent, and I get nothing in return, except the ability to poorly imitate my writing/art style, making my work, blood, sweat and tears I shed over these years to create that style worthless. Both parties earn exorbitant amount of money with my work, for free, and suck me dry in the process. One at least gives me a paltry PDF file and maybe some recognition, and the other one threatens my livelihood while raising hype and applauding degeneration of human achievement and reducing it to a mere set of numbers. Both are cutting the tree they're living on, though. |