this post was submitted on 26 Jul 2023
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you're accusing me of what you are clearly doing after I've explained twice how you're doing that. I'm not going to waste my time doing it again. except:
except that the contention isn't necessarily over what work is being produced (although whether it's derivative work is still a matter for a court to decide anyway), it's regarding that the source material is used for training without compensation.
and, likewise, so are these companies who have been using copyrighted material - without compensating the content creators - to train their AIs.
That wouldn't be copyright infringement.
It isn't infringement to use a copyrighted work for whatever purpose you please. What's infringement is reproducing it.
and you accused me of "completely misunderstanding copyright law" lmao wow
Yes. I do. And I'm right.
lmao
It's infringement to use copyrighted material for commercial purposes.
If I buy my support staff "IT for Dummies", and they then, sometimes, reproduce the same/similar advice (turn it off and on again), I owe the textbook writers money? That's news to me.
No, it isn't. There are enumerated rights a copyright grants the holder a monopoly over. They are reproduction, derivative works, public performances, public displays, distribution, and digital transmission.
Commercial vs non-commercial has nothing to do with it, nor does field of endeavor. And aside from the granted monopoly, no other rights are granted. A copyright does not let you decide how your work is used once sold.
I don't know where you guys get these ideas.