Interesting copy-write ruling.
" This marks the first time that the courts have given credence to AI companies’ claim that fair use doctrine can absolve AI companies from fault when they use copyrighted materials to train large language models (LLMs)."
Tl;dr one of AI companies allowed itself to train on pirated data - novels... trying to build a library of all books. And judge seems okay with this. As AGI gets better, without guardrails, it will be able to sniff out pirated data... I can envision a future where i ask some "media AI" to just find me some content - a book or tv series or whatever and it will generate something pretty dang close, with fees going to the AI company instead of the original author.
techcrunch.com
" This marks the first time that the courts have given credence to AI companies’ claim that fair use doctrine can absolve AI companies from fault when they use copyrighted materials to train large language models (LLMs)."
Tl;dr one of AI companies allowed itself to train on pirated data - novels... trying to build a library of all books. And judge seems okay with this. As AGI gets better, without guardrails, it will be able to sniff out pirated data... I can envision a future where i ask some "media AI" to just find me some content - a book or tv series or whatever and it will generate something pretty dang close, with fees going to the AI company instead of the original author.

A federal judge sides with Anthropic in lawsuit over training AI on books without authors' permission | TechCrunch
The ruling isn't a guarantee for how similar cases will proceed, but it lays the foundations for a precedent that would side with tech companies over creatives.
