Generative artificial intelligence (GenAI) company Anthropic has claimed to a US court that using copyrighted content in large language model (LLM) training data counts as “fair use”, however.

Under US law, “fair use” permits the limited use of copyrighted material without permission, for purposes such as criticism, news reporting, teaching, and research.

In October 2023, a host of music publishers including Concord, Universal Music Group and ABKCO initiated legal action against the Amazon- and Google-backed generative AI firm Anthropic, demanding potentially millions in damages for the allegedly “systematic and widespread infringement of their copyrighted song lyrics”.

  • FfaerieOxide
    link
    fedilink
    25 months ago

    Feels kinda inconsistent.

    Perfectly consistent. Seeming otherwise is down to a failure to grasp my position, not any inconsistency of the positions themselves.

    • Deceptichum
      link
      fedilink
      15 months ago

      If you steal content from creatives, does that not put them out of work?

      • @megopie@beehaw.org
        link
        fedilink
        25 months ago

        There is a difference between an individual pirating a movie and a huge private company pirating a movie and then reselling it to people.

        You can debate the morality or social impacts of the former, but it is a very different question than the later.

        • Deceptichum
          link
          fedilink
          15 months ago

          So it’s okay when they steal content and drive it away to people for free?

          Ex. Facebook gives away their LLM model for free.

          Llama 2 is available for free for research and commercial use.

          https://ai.meta.com/llama/

          • @megopie@beehaw.org
            link
            fedilink
            15 months ago

            I do not think it is ok when a large company throws a bunch of other people’s data and content in to a wood chipper and then gives away the wood chips to get more people using their services.