• lol3droflxp@kbin.social
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    1 year ago

    The LLMs don’t deserve or have any rights. They’re a tool that people can use. Just like reference material, spellcheckers, asset libraries or whatever else creatives use. As long as they don’t actually violate copyright in the classical sense of just copy pasting stuff the product people generate using them is probably as (un)original as a lot of art out there. And collages can be transformative enough to qualify for copyright.

    • admiralteal@kbin.social
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      1 year ago

      As long as they don’t actually violate copyright in the classical sense of just copy pasting stuff…

      As far as we know, that is exactly how they work. They are very, very complex systems for copying and pasting stuff.

      And collages can be transformative enough to qualify for copyright

      Sure, if they were made with human creativity they deserve the protections meant to keep creative humans alive. But who cares? They are not humans and thus do not get those protections.

      • lol3droflxp@kbin.social
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        1 year ago

        They are physically unable to just copy paste stuff. The models are tiny compared to the training data, they don’t store it.

        • admiralteal@kbin.social
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          1 year ago

          That claim doesn’t prove your premise. I get that it feels clever, but it isn’t.

          Just because they’re very good at reproducing information from highly pared down and compressed forms does not mean they are not reproducing information. If that were true, you wouldn’t be able to enforce copyright on a jpeg photo of a painting.

          • lol3droflxp@kbin.social
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            1 year ago

            If it was a compression algorithm then it would be insanely efficient and that’d be the big thing about it. The simple fact is that they aren’t able to reproduce their exact training data so no, they aren’t storing it in a highly compressed form.

            • admiralteal@kbin.social
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              1 year ago

              I think there’s a lot of Dunning–Kruger here.

              The simple fact is that they aren’t able to reproduce their exact training data so no, they aren’t storing it in a highly compressed form.

              See: jpeg analogy. You’ve described here lossy compression not something that is categorically different than compression. Perhaps the AI models are VERY lossy. But that doesn’t mean it is original or creative.

              But the reality is, we largely do not know how these chatbots work. They are black boxes even to the researchers themselves. That’s just how neural networks are. But the thing I know is they are not themselves creative. All they can do is follow weights to reproduce the things human classifiers evaluated as subjectively “good” over the things they subjectively evaluated as “bad”. All the creativity happened in the training process – the inputs and the testing. All of the apparent creativity outputted is a product of the humans involved in training and testing the model, not the model itself. The actual creative force is somewhere far away.

              • lol3droflxp@kbin.social
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                1 year ago

                I see a lot of Dunning Kruger here as well. The fact is that you can generate novel images/texts/whatever with these tools. They may mostly suck but they’re still novel so they can be copyrighted by whoever used these tools to create them.

                • admiralteal@kbin.social
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                  1 year ago

                  Even if I grant your premise that their produce is novel – I don’t, that is fundamentally not how they work – the copyright would be held by the bot in that case, not the person who used it.

                  No more than a person who commissions a painting has copyright for the work. That’s not how creativity, LLMs, nor copyright law works.