this post was submitted on 19 Aug 2023
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[–] [email protected] 1 points 1 year ago (1 children)

And I'm sure that the government would grant copyright on the human-generated inputs to an imitative large language model so-called "AI." Not sure it would be worth anything, though.

Hell, I would bet that one might be able to copyright the database that was fed to an LLM, as long as it was independently generated & created by a human and not just a hoovering of a bunch of other authors' works.

The courts have this right, for sure. Presumably we can't copyright the answer that comes out of a calculator when we hit the "=" button. But we can copyright all the formula manipulation and original thought that went into deciding which keys to press on the calculator, and possibly even the action of pressing the keys? Not sure on that last bit.

[–] [email protected] 3 points 1 year ago

The "creation" is algorithmic, and just like the calculator's output that cannot be copyrighted. That's based on "facts" of the universe, not "creation."

Is saying "i want a long form show about 80s teenagers in a small town, one of which has psychic powers, with an overarching dark force that opposes them" really going to be "creative" enough to protect a tv series worth of output?

I think that falls apart in the same way that setting up a security camera once and then walking away doesnt give you permanent copyright over whatever it captures. There isn't enough humanity in the creation to count it as "uniquely human." The court seems to agree.