Do you promise?Copyright class actions could financially ruin AI industry, trade groups say.
Because tech relies on copyright as well. They want the benefits without the costs, as is tradition in the US.Their entire argument is essentially "this will bankrupt us so please don't let it happen". That... cannot possibly hold up. It hasn't been a problem for individuals hit with copyright infringement, at least.
Why hasn't "big tech" gone after "big copyright" with this, anyway? If copyrights cause so much trouble for them, they ought to be arguing and lobbying that copyrights are too long.
More harm than the current fascist government?...the district court’s erroneous class certification" would threaten "immense harm ... to America’s global technological competitiveness."

I'm going with the pay up option.Geez the argument sounds like "But going bankrupt from massive copyright fines is for little people! THIS IS UNFAIR STOP IT!!!"
Also the blatant lying. These suits will resolve the unanswered questions. Either with a "No you can't do that and you should have known, now pay up", "No you can't do that but it is unreasonable to expect you to have gotten to this conclusion yourself.", or a variation on "That is permissible."
It ruined people that were just downloading music to listen in their home.It ruined Napster too...
I should note that when human teachers are training human students, they need to have a valid license for all the copyrighted material in their training library. Schools and teachers are frequently audited to ensure they have a valid license for everything they are using. I personally know teachers who have faced career limiting punishments for photocoping material into their training library without a license.
I guess that's the risk you run pushing boundaries into an unexplored legal area. If there's enough evidence of laws broken to take a case to trial, "this will hurt our business" is not a valid defense in any context.If the appeals court denies the petition, Anthropic argued, the emerging company may be doomed. As Anthropic argued, it now "faces hundreds of billions of dollars in potential damages liability at trial in four months" based on a class certification rushed at "warp speed" that involves "up to seven million potential claimants, whose works span a century of publishing history," each possibly triggering a $150,000 fine.
Because they still want to be able to benefit from strong copyrights."...
Why hasn't "big tech" gone after "big copyright" with this, anyway? If copyrights cause so much trouble for them, they ought to be arguing and lobbying that copyrights are too long."
They need to work children in here somehow. Because someone needs to think of the children.Geez the argument sounds like "But going bankrupt from massive copyright fines is for little people! THIS IS UNFAIR STOP IT!!!"
Also the blatant lying. These suits will resolve the unanswered questions. Either with a "No you can't do that and you should have known, now pay up", "No you can't do that but it is unreasonable to expect you to have gotten to this conclusion yourself.", or a variation on "That is permissible."
Remember, copywrite is only a problem temporarily, and only if it affects you. Not you? Weird laws? Someone Else's Problem.Their entire argument is essentially "this will bankrupt us so please don't let it happen". That... cannot possibly hold up. It hasn't been a problem for individuals hit with copyright infringement, at least.
Why hasn't "big tech" gone after "big copyright" with this, anyway? If copyrights cause so much trouble for them, they ought to be arguing and lobbying that copyrights are too long.
Are you saying their argument is kind of artificial?I guess that's the risk you run pushing boundaries into an unexplored legal area. If there's enough evidence of laws broken to take a case to trial, "this will hurt our business" is not a valid defense in any context.
You'd think they'd be more "intelligent" than that in their defense.
Yeah, but that's not really an argument in favor of AI. We would be better off with a circa-2002 super-basic chatbot running the USA at this point.We would be better off with AI running the USA.
Which is so fucking stupid because multiple copies for classroom use is one of the examples quite literally set out in US law as being fair use and thus not an infringement.I should note that when human teachers are training human students, they need to have a valid license for all the copyrighted material in their training library. Schools and teachers are frequently audited to ensure they have a valid license for everything they are using. I personally know teachers who have faced career limiting punishments for photocoping material into their training library without a license.
17 U.S. Code § 107 - Limitations on exclusive rights: Fair use] said:Notwithstanding the provisions of sections 106 and 106A, the fair use of a copyrighted work, including such use by reproduction in copies or phonorecords or by any other means specified by that section, for purposes such as criticism, comment, news reporting, teaching (including multiple copies for classroom use), scholarship, or research, is not an infringement of copyright. In determining whether the use made of a work in any particular case is a fair use the factors to be considered shall include —
(1) the purpose and character of the use, including whether such use is of a commercial nature or is for nonprofit educational purposes;
(2) the nature of the copyrighted work;
(3) the amount and substantiality of the portion used in relation to the copyrighted work as a whole; and
(4) the effect of the use upon the potential market for or value of the copyrighted work.
The fact that a work is unpublished shall not itself bar a finding of fair use if such finding is made upon consideration of all the above factors.
Yeah, but that's not really an argument in favor of AI. We would be better off with a circa-2002 super-basic chatbot running the USA at this point.
Or, like early autonomous driving results, maybe this is just as good as it's ever going to be. It'll get stripped down and simplified and used for things like managing telephone "help" labyrinths and replace the robovoiced hard-wired mazes used now.AI could be much better than it is. That it hoovers up the contents of the internet and books fed to it without qualify and validating data makes AI what it is today. If this reckoning comes to pass the generation of LLMs that come afterwards could be much better. I'm doubtful as I know that AI companies will just swirl down to the bottom and take whatever is free and cannot sue them, but I like to find positives within my jaded view of the world.