| ▲ | nairboon 4 hours ago |
| No, GPL still holds even if you transform the source code from one language to another language. |
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| ▲ | anilgulecha 3 hours ago | parent [-] |
| That why I carved it out to just the specs. If they can be read as "facts", then the new code is not derived but arrived at with TTD. The thesis I propose is that tests are more akin to facts, or can be stated as facts, and facts are not copyright-able. That's what makes this case interesting. |
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| ▲ | nairboon 3 hours ago | parent [-] | | I assumed that "tests" refers to a program too, which in this example is likely GPL. Thus GPL would stick already on the AI-rewrite of GPL test code. If "tests" should mean a proper specification let's say some IETF RFC of a protocol, then that would be different. | | |
| ▲ | anilgulecha 3 hours ago | parent [-] | | Yes, I had not specified in my original comment. But in the SOTA LLM world code/text boundary is so blurry, so as to be non-existent. |
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