this post was submitted on 10 May 2025
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a) An AI is not a person. We do not WANT an AI to be regarded as equal to a person under law. That's a terrible idea
b) How is that AI training material being generated? Did they buy copies of every copyrighted song and every movie by every artist to include in the training data? If it's music and streamed, are they paying the artist royalties based on every "play" the AI is processing during training the same as of a human played the song over and over again to learn a long? How about sheet music? Because if a PERSON is learning from training material, the license for sheet music and training materials is different than a playable copy of the same work.
I'm willing to bet that the AI companies didn't even pay for the regular copies of works much less ones licensed for use as training materials for humans, but it didn't matter because an AI is an advanced algorithm and NOT A HUMAN.
a) No one is suggesting AI be regarded as equal to a person under law though?
b) if the music is being streamed then it’s up to the streaming company to pay the artists royalties. I have Spotify and I don’t pay the artists - Spotify does.
If the argument is “the people feeding data into the AI illegally acquired the content” then sure, argue that and prosecute them for piracy or whatever. That’s not the argument that is being made though.
In Meta's court case it is one of the arguments.
That arguments not going to be of any use then.