Do they think the hands-off treatment that giant corporations that basically print money get is going to somehow “trickle down” to them, too?

Because last I checked, the guys who ran Jetflicks are facing jail time. Like, potentially longer jail time than most murder sentences.

…but letting OpenAI essentially do the same without consequences will mean Open Source AI people will somehow get the same hands-off treatment? That just reeks of bullshit to me.

I just don’t fucking buy it and letting massive corporations just skirt IP laws while everyone else gets fucked hard by those same IP laws just doesn’t seem like the best hill to die on, yet plenty of people who are anti-copyright/anti-IP laws are dying on this fucking hill.

What gives?


I am personally of the opinion that current IP/copyright laws are draconian, but that IP/copyright isn’t inherently a bad thing. I just know, based on previous history in the US, that letting the Big Guys skirt laws almost never leads to Little Guys getting similar treatment.


Also, I hope this is an okay place for this rant. Thanks for keeping this space awesome. Please remove if this is inappropriate for this forum, please and thank you.

  • Snot FlickermanOP
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    4 days ago

    So I’ve adopted this line: “If it’s posted publicly, expect it to be used publicly” which includes just your average joe seeing it browsing around or a bot grabbing it for AI training

    Very akin to an old Mark Hosler (of Negativland) interview where he said (not verbatim, cant find the old interview): “If you want to keep full control of your art, keep it in your home, maybe share it with family or a few close friends, but once that art is out in the wider world, you don’t really have control over it anymore.” Because, as you point out, an artist can recreate art that they have seen with their own eyes, but it will likely be a bit off from the original.

    While I agree, let me play Devil’s Advocate for a moment: books3 was “publicly posted” but was created from all the books on private torrent tracker Bibliotik. Would you agree that this would fall under private data since it’s all pirated ebooks?

    As for the Jetflicks guys, to me it’s mostly twisted that they’re up for more jail time than a lot of murderers get. Otherwise, I agree, the profits they made kind of kill any narrative that they were doing it for good reasons or that they deserve a massive amount of sympathy.

    • @cm0002@lemmy.world
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      24 days ago

      books3 was “publicly posted” but was created from all the books on private torrent tracker Bibliotik. Would you agree that this would fall under private data since it’s all pirated ebooks?

      Not necessarily private data per se, but if it’s being used to train a closed source model for profit (like openai using it for chatGPT) then I would consider it in the same realm as with the Jetflicks guys of using pirated works for profit. If it was just a couple people or researchers using it to train an open source model, then I see no issue with that especially since it’s helping further advancement of technology for all over advancement of profits for one company.

      As for the Jetflicks guys, to me it’s mostly twisted that they’re up for more jail time than a lot of murderers get.

      I was unaware of that part, ok they’ll get sympathy from me on that, that’s absolutely disgusting.