• nyan@lemmy.cafe
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      9 months ago

      “Reading” is the act of viewing the unaltered text. It’s possible for a LLM to have text in its training set that no human has ever viewed in its original form. So no, a LLM is not equivalent to a pair of glasses in this case.

      In effect, a LLM is a fancy datanbase that spits back modified subsets of its stored information in response to queries. Does this mean that the original data was “stored in a retrieval system” without permission (specifically forbidden by British copyright law, I believe, and possibly others)? Is the LLM creating “unauthorized derivative works”, which is illegal in many countries? Just where is the line between a derivative work and a work “inspired by” another, but still legal, anyway? Is it the same in every jurisdiction?

      I’m not a lawyer, and I have no idea how many worms are going to creep out of this can, but one thing I’m absolutely certain of is that it isn’t going to be simple to sort out, no matter how many people would like it to be or think that “common sense” is on their side.

        • nyan@lemmy.cafe
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          9 months ago

          . . . Wow. I’m going to be polite and assume that you never took physics in high school, instead of failing the unit on optics. Might want to bone up on that before you make an argument that deals with the physics of lenses, just sayin’.

          You don’t appear to have much understanding of how the law operates either. It’s always complicated and difficult, and judges take a dim view of people who try to twist words around to mean something other than the contract defines them to mean.