this post was submitted on 06 Sep 2024
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Is the pirate valued at $100,000,000,000? Will the pirate ever make enough of a dent to be considered a rounding error in a $100bn valuation? Is the pirate even attempting to turn a profit?
If the training data was for personal consumption, knock yourself out. When you try to say you're worth billions but can't afford to pay for the material? Fuck all the way off. I'm sure fucknuts at the top of this is gonna get a fat fucking pay day, so scrape a few fucking zeros off their quartly bonus and pay the people actually making the fucking content you are ABSOLUTELY going to turn around and try to make a profit off of.
Don't forget that the pirates usually don't say "art should have been just a weekend hobby, not a profession".
I don't see how this addresses my question. Just because someone is causing bigger harm it doesn't justify causing a little harm. Stealing a lollipop is less bad than stealing a car but it's still both stealing. AI companies can afford paying for the material just like online pirate can afford paying for the movie.
Because the small thief in this example is not making money from the theft
No, but they're saving money which is effectively the same thing. There's no practical difference between earning 50 bucks and getting a 50 buck discount.
That’s not quite true, though, is it?
$50 earned is yours to spend on anything. A $50 discount is offered by a vendor to entice you to spend enough of your money on them to make the discount worthwhile.
Pirates don’t pirate because they’re trying to save money on something they would have bought otherwise… typically they pirate because the amount they consume would bankrupt them if they purchased it through legitimate means, so they would never have been a paying customer in the first place.
So, if they wouldn’t have bought it anyway, and they’re not reselling it, did they really harm the vendor? Whether they pirated it or not, it wouldn’t affect the vendor either way.
That’s not really the same thing, in my opinion.
If you were able to pay for everything handily but pirated anyway, or if you resold pirated content, then yeah you have something similar to theft going on. But that’s not really the norm; those people are doing something bad irrespective of the piracy itself, aren’t they?
They wouldn't have bought all the content they have pirated if piracy was not an option but they would have bought some of it.
Piracy has saves money. Saving money means I have more money to spend on other things. Earning money means I have more money to spend on other things. There's no practical difference between the two.
In my view, my point still stands; being against one but not the other is hypocritical.
It’s not hypocritical if you believe that theft is wrong because it hurts another person, rather than wrong because you don’t deserve the thing or that it offers you an unfair advantage. Your argument leans heavily on the latter but mine the former.
Then please explain how pirating movies or games doesn't cause harm to other people but training AI with the copyrighted work of others does.
In both cases you're taking something for free that you're expected to pay for. In both cases there's someone not getting paid. The only difference between the two that I can see is the scale which is irrelevant from the point of view of the argument I'm making which is that it's hypocritical to be against one but not the other.
I never said I thought training AI with the copyrighted work of others causes harm to others. If anything, I think training is analogous enough to human learning that it’s a gray area. However, I think there are different ethical concerns with AI training data than there are with piracy, and those concerns mostly arise from the profit being made from the models.