▲ | kyledrake 10 months ago | |||||||||||||||||||||||||
My understanding is that there is no concept of a library license and that you just say you're a library and therefore become one, and whether your claim survives is more a product of social cultural acceptance than actual legal structures but someone is welcome to correct me. The internet archive also scrapes the web for content, does not pay authors, the difference being that it spits out literal copies of the content it scraped, whereas an LLM fundamentally attempts to derive a new thing from the knowledge it obtains. I just can't figure out how to plug this into copyright law. It feels like a new thing. | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||
▲ | quectophoton 10 months ago | parent [-] | |||||||||||||||||||||||||
Also, Google Translate, when used to translate web pages: > does not pay authors Check. > it spits out literal copies of the content it scraped Check. > attempts to derive a new thing from the knowledge it obtains. Check. * Is interactive: Check. * Can output text that sounds syntactically and grammatically correct, but a human can instantly say "that doesn't look right": Check. * Changing one word in a sentence affects words in a completely different sentence, because that changed the context: Check. | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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