simonw 2 days ago

When did they use copyrighted material illegally?

I didn't think any of the ongoing "fair use" lawsuits had reached a conclusion on that.

2
jamessinghal 2 days ago

The Thomson Reuters case [1] is the most relevant in the court's finding that the copying of copyrighted material from Westlaw by Ross Intelligence was direct copyright infringement and was not fair use.

The purpose of training in many of the AI Labs being sued mostly matches the conditions that Ross Intelligence was found to have violated, and the question of copying is almost guaranteed if they trained on it.

[1] Thomson Reuters Enterprise Centre GmbH et al v. ROSS Intelligence Inc. https://www.ded.uscourts.gov/sites/ded/files/opinions/20-613...

simonw 2 days ago

Thanks, I hadn't seen that one.

pier25 2 days ago

ok then let's say they used the copyrighted material without permission

pier25 2 days ago

Sorry, I meant to write "monetized copyrighted material without permission".

We'll see if the courts deem it legal but it's, without a doubt, unehtical.

FeepingCreature 2 days ago

Eh, I have the opposite view but then again I'm a copyright minimalist.

pier25 1 day ago

So you think artists do not need to be able to make a living?

simonw 2 days ago

That's true, they did.