In its submission to the Australian government’s review of the regulatory framework around AI, Google said that copyright law should be altered to allow for generative AI systems to scrape the internet.

  • phillaholic@lemm.ee
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    1 year ago

    The lines between learning and copying are being blurred with AI. Imagine if you could replay a movie any time you like in your head just from watching it once. Current copyright law wasn’t written with that in mind. It’s going to be interesting how this goes.

    • jarfil@beehaw.org
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      1 year ago

      Imagine if you could replay a movie any time you like in your head just from watching it once.

      Two points:

      1. These AIs can’t do that; they need thousands or millions of repetitions to “learn” the movie, and every time they “replay” the movie it is different from the original.

      2. “learning by rote” is something fleshbags can do, and are actually required to by most education systems.

      So either humans have been breaking the copyright all this time, or the machines aren’t breaking it either.

      • SokathHisEyesOpen@lemmy.ml
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        1 year ago

        Well fleshbags have to pay several years worth of salary to get their education, so by your comparison, Google’s AI should too.

        • MachineFab812@discuss.tchncs.de
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          1 year ago

          Imagine thinking Public Education doesn’t count. Or that no one without a college degree ever invented anything useful. That’s before we get to your notion of “College SHOULD be expensive, for everyone, always”.

          The problem with education is NOT that some people pay less for theirs, or nothing at all, nor that some even have the audacity to learn quickly. AI could help everyone to have a chance to learn cheaply, even quickly.