▲ | bbarnett 2 days ago | |||||||||||||||||||||||||
It may be legal in your jurisdiction, but I think this is a more generic conversation that the specific work class being copied. And further, my point is also that other parts of copyright law, at least where I live, view "for profit copying" and "some dude wanting to print out a webpage" entirely different. I feel it makes sense. Amusingly, I feel that an ironic twist would be a judgement that all currently trained LLMs, would be unusable for commercial use. | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||
▲ | shkkmo 2 days ago | parent [-] | |||||||||||||||||||||||||
> other parts of copyright law, at least where I live, view "for profit copying" and "some dude wanting to print out a webpage" entirely different. I don't know what your jurisdiction is however through treaties, much of how USA copyright law works has been exported to many other countries so it is a reasonable place to base discussion. In the USA commercial vs. non-commercial is not sufficent to determine if copying violates copyright law. It is one of several factors that is used to determine "fair use" and while it definitely helps, non-commerical use can easily infringe (torrents) and commercial use can be fine (telephone book white pages). > a judgement that all currently trained LLMs, would be unusable for commercial use I sure hope not. I don't like or use LLMs but I also don't like copyright law and I hate to see it receive such an expansion of power. | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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