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by gruez
514 days ago
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>This is not a good analogy. Google does not display the contents to any significant degree (you have to visit the search result). The point isn't that AI training is legal because it's like generating thumbnails. That is being argued in the courts right now. The point is that fair use exemptions isn't limited to "being a conscious human being enjoying human rights", as google generating thumnails and snippets using computers shows. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Perfect_10,_Inc._v._Amazon.com.... > Examples of fair use in United States copyright law include commentary, search engines, criticism, parody, news reporting, research, and scholarship. Those are examples, not an exhaustive list. It's not even something that Judges are supposed to compare against when deciding whether something is fair use or not, see: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fair_use#U.S._fair_use_factors |
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Sure. However, my point is that this is not fair use*, so other principles need to be applied. Whether legal systems in various countries find that fair use applies here or not, I agree we are yet to see.
* At least in cases where it’s an LLM operated at scale for profit (which I suppose would not hold for Meta’s models if they were truly open, but that’s not the case if they require obtaining a license in some conditions).