OpenAI now tries to hide that ChatGPT was trained on copyrighted books, including J.K. Rowling’s Harry Potter series::A new research paper laid out ways in which AI developers should try and avoid showing LLMs have been trained on copyrighted material.

  • scarabic@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    First, we don’t have to make AI.

    Second, it’s not about it being unable to learn, it’s about the fact that they aren’t paying the people who are teaching it.

      • assassin_aragorn@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        because it might hurt authors and musicians and artists and other creative workers

        FTFY. Corporations shouldn’t be making a fucking dime from any of these works without fairly paying the creators.

      • FatCrab@lemmy.one
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        1 year ago

        The reasoning that claims training a generative model is infringing IP would still mean a robot going into a library with a card it has to optically read all the books there to create the same generative model would still be infringing IP.

      • AncientMariner@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        Humans can judge information make decisions on it and adapt it. AI mostly just looks at what is statistically what is most likely based on training data. If 1 piece of data exists, it will copy, not paraphrase. Example was from I think copilot where it just printed out the code and comments from an old game verbatim. I think Quake2. It isn’t intelligence, it is statistical copying.

        • uis@lemmy.world
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          1 year ago

          Well, mathematics cannot be copyrighted. In most countries at least.