(no title)
semi | 1 year ago
I disagree. Granted I'm a layman and not a lawyer so I have no clue how the court feels. But I can certainly make very specialized algorithms to produce whatever output I want from whatever input I want, and that shouldn't let me declare any input as infringing on any rights.
For the reducto ad absurdum example: I demand everyone stops using spaces, using the algorithm 'remove a space and add my copyrighted text' it produces an identical copy of my copyrighted text.
For the less absurd example.. if I took any clean model without your copyrighted text, and brute forced prompts and settings until I produced your text, is your model violating the copyright or is my inputs?
bckr|1 year ago