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26 points

They do not have permission to pass it on. It might be an issue if they didn’t stop it.

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50 points

As if they had permission to take it in the first place

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-7 points

They almost certainly had, as it was downloaded from the net. Some stuff gets published accidentally or illegally, but that’s hardly something they can be expected to detect or police.

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14 points

They almost certainly had, as it was downloaded from the net.

That’s not how it works. That’s not how anything works.

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3 points

Unless you’re arguing that any use of data from the Internet counts as “fair use” and therefore is excepted under copyright law, what you’re saying makes no sense.

There may be an argument that some of the ways ChatGPT uses data could count as fair use. OTOH, when it’s spitting out its training material 1:1, that makes it pretty clear it’s copyright infringement.

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2 points

that’s hardly something they can be expected to detect or police.

Why not?

I couldn’t, but I also do not have an “awesomely powerful AI on the verge of destroying humanity”. Seems it would be simple for them. I mean, if I had such a thing, I would be expected to use it to solve such simple problems.

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-7 points
*

It’s a hugely grey area but as far as the courts are concerned if it’s on the internet and it’s not behind a paywall or password then it’s publicly available information.

I could write a script to just visit loads of web pages and scrape the text contents of those pages and drop them into a big huge text file essentially that’s exactly what they did.

If those web pages are human accessible for free then I can’t see how they could be considered anything other than public domain information in which case you explicitly don’t need to ask the permission.

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34 points
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If those web pages are human accessible for free then I can’t see how they could be considered anything other than public domain information

I don’t think that’s the case. A photographer can post pictures on their website for free, but that doesn’t make it legal for anyone else to slap the pictures on t-shirts and sell them.

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6 points

as far as the courts are concerned if it’s on the internet and it’s not behind a paywall or password then it’s publicly available information.

Er… no. That’s not in the slightest bit true.

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4 points

You can go to your closest library and do the exact same thing: copy all books by hand, or whatever. Of you then use that information to make a product you sell, then you’re in trouble, as the books are still protected by copyright, even when they’re publicly available.

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3 points

Google provides sample text for every site that comes up in the results, and they put ads on the page too. If it’s publicly available we are well past at least a portion being fair use.

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39 points

In a lot of cases, they don’t have permission to not pass it along. Some of that training data was copyleft!

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