| ▲ | p_l a day ago | |
An important point in copyright infringement is that it generally applies on distribution to other parties. So the process of acquiring inputs may or may not be an infringement, but with at least proposed EU rules it does not matter to created model itself. The exception being that output it produces is judged similar to infringement as human output without any "transformative work" credit to model - so similar to how a human could learn a book or painting to memory and close enough reproduction from memory would be infringement, but not generally using the ideas taken from them | ||
| ▲ | pbhjpbhj 7 hours ago | parent [-] | |
Actually, copyright generally is infringed when a copy is made; hence the name. That's why, say, 17 USC 106 lists reproduction as the first exclusive right of a copyright holder. And why Berne Article 9 [^1] is about restricting right of reproduction to the author. Damages are often, in different jurisdictions, related to actual harm. So, distribution is the focus of lawsuits because actual harm in the making of a copy is usually negligible. Few people are suing to stop copying, they're suing to be recompensed for the [potential] commercial benefit derived from the copying. In as far as you need to make a copy to use it to process and adjust the weights of an ML model, then yes this activity is an infringement to the right to control reproduction. One of the measures for transformative use is whether the production of the copy commercially harms the original creator/author. I can't see how you can argue that ML models don't do that. Besides which we don't have an equivalent precedent to 'transformative use' in UK so where our courts can go with all this is not clear. | ||