
The New York Times sues OpenAI, Microsoft over use of its stories to train chatbots
The New York Times is suing OpenAI and Microsoft, trying to end the practice of using its stories to train chatbots
You can copyright a *style*? Can I copyright "rap music" and then sue anyone who produces said music? I'm gonna copyright "science fiction" and sue the bejesus out of anyone producing more crap Star Wars/Trek shows that don;t meet my standards.The New York Times understands copyright law. ... It's about using copyright works without permission or compensation.
As far as I understood, a "style" would be considered "method of operation", which, according to what I knew about patent laws - could not be patented.You can copyright a *style*?
Well, they already made Google Translate orders of magnitude better than it was just a few years ago, so...Because they know they can monetize this across multiple languages around the world.
Maybe the media did not convey the issue well, I don't know. If style is not the issue, what is?The New York Times understands copyright law. No one I've seen online does. Copying styles is not the issue. OpenAI has taken military-grade pattern recognition technology and applied it to text and images on a scale far beyond what even a large group of individuals can do, and Microsoft is backing it with billions. Why is that? Because they know they can monetize this across multiple languages around the world. It's about using copyright works without permission or compensation. There's ZERO shakiness about the Times' position, and I'm sure they ran this by their legal department before filing. By the way, I've been working in publishing for decades. Some people want to apply the "we only stole this a little" fallacy. OpenAI took a chance and they are now in the crosshairs, along with Microsoft.
You write a book about sparkly teen vampires. It's dreadful, but teen and sub-teen girls across the land go nuts for it. A woman decides to write some fan fiction about the main characters doing some BDSM. She decides to publish it... but before going to press, does a bit of a re-write, changing vampires to billionaires, replacing names, etc. But the story remains more or less the same, and of course the origin remains the same. What happens when she publishes? Do you sue her, because she read your stuff and wrote, for profit, something derived from it?You write a book called Lord of the Rings and apply for a copyright through the Copyright Office. You also add the words "All rights reserved." That means when someone wants to make a movie or TV show based on your book they have to get your permission, and you work out a fair compensation agreement.
The difference being that Author B paid for Author A's books to read them.You write a book about sparkly teen vampires. It's dreadful, but teen and sub-teen girls across the land go nuts for it. A woman decides to write some fan fiction about the main characters doing some BDSM. She decides to publish it... but before going to press, does a bit of a re-write, changing vampires to billionaires, replacing names, etc. But the story remains more or less the same, and of course the origin remains the same. What happens when she publishes? Do you sue her, because she read your stuff and wrote, for profit, something derived from it?
Nope. She goes on to make a ton of money, all legal and aboveboard. Hollywood comes calling and she makes a few more truckloads of cash.
That's what ChatGPT seems to be doing here.
The difference being that Author B paid for Author A's books to read them.
i auppose that works right up until you call said teen vampire hunter Buffy, Scruffy or Dutch.........You write a book about sparkly teen vampires. It's dreadful, but teen and sub-teen girls across the land go nuts for it. A woman decides to write some fan fiction about the main characters doing some BDSM. She decides to publish it... but before going to press, does a bit of a re-write, changing vampires to billionaires, replacing names, etc. But the story remains more or less the same, and of course the origin remains the same. What happens when she publishes? Do you sue her, because she read your stuff and wrote, for profit, something derived from it?
Nope. She goes on to make a ton of money, all legal and aboveboard. Hollywood comes calling and she makes a few more truckloads of cash.
That's what ChatGPT seems to be doing here.
It seems like a good idea, I'm going to start researching about vampire millionaires with BDSM tastes, it will sell well.You write a book about sparkly teen vampires. It's dreadful, but teen and sub-teen girls across the land go nuts for it. A woman decides to write some fan fiction about the main characters doing some BDSM. She decides to publish it... but before going to press, does a bit of a re-write, changing vampires to billionaires, replacing names, etc. But the story remains more or less the same, and of course the origin remains the same. What happens when she publishes? Do you sue her, because she read your stuff and wrote, for profit, something derived from it?
Nope. She goes on to make a ton of money, all legal and aboveboard. Hollywood comes calling and she makes a few more truckloads of cash.
That's what ChatGPT seems to be doing here.