this post was submitted on 19 Jan 2024
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A New York Times copyright lawsuit could kill OpenAI::A list of authors and entertainers are also suing the tech company for damages that could total in the billions.

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[–] makyo@lemmy.world 68 points 10 months ago (9 children)

I always say this when this comes up because I really believe it's the right solution - any generative AI built with unlicensed and/or public works should then be free for the public to use.

If they want to charge for access that's fine but they should have to go about securing legal rights first. If that's impossible, they should worry about profits some other way like maybe add-ons such as internet connected AI and so forth.

[–] fidodo@lemmy.world 11 points 10 months ago (1 children)

There's plenty of money to be made providing infrastructure. Lots of companies make a ton of money providing infrastructure for open source projects.

On another note, why is open AI even called "open"?

[–] ItsMeSpez@lemmy.world 4 points 10 months ago

On another note, why is open AI even called “open”?

It's because of the implication...

[–] Pacmanlives@lemmy.world 9 points 10 months ago (1 children)

Not really how it works these days. Look at Uber and Lime/Bird scooters. They basically would just show up to a city and say the hell with the law we are starting our business here. We just call it disruptive technology

[–] makyo@lemmy.world 6 points 10 months ago

Unfortunately true, and the long arm of the law, at least in the business world, isn't really that long. Would love to see some monopoly busting to scare a few of these big companies into shape.

[–] Drewelite@lemmynsfw.com 6 points 10 months ago

A very compelling solution! Allows a model of free use while providing an avenue for business to spend time developing it

[–] miridius@lemmy.world 3 points 10 months ago (2 children)

Nice idea but how do you propose they pay for the billions of dollars it costs to train and then run said model?

[–] nexusband@lemmy.world 5 points 10 months ago (1 children)

Then don't do it. Simple as that.

[–] miridius@lemmy.world 1 points 10 months ago (2 children)

This is why we can't have nice things

[–] nickwitha_k@lemmy.sdf.org 2 points 10 months ago (1 children)

If we didn't live under an economic system where creatives need to sell their works to make a living or even just survive, there wouldn't be an issue. What OpenAI is doing is little different than any other worker exploitation, however. They are taking the fruits of the labor of others, without compensation of any kind, then using it to effectively destroy their livelihoods.

Few, if any, of the benefits of technological innovation related to LLMs or related tech is improving things for anyone but the already ultra-wealthy. That is the actual reason that we can't have nice things; the greedy being obsessed with taking and taking while giving less than nothing back in return.

Just like noone is entitled to own a business that can't afford to pay a living wage, OpenAI is not entitled to run a business aimed at building tools to destroy the livelihoods of countless thousands, if not millions, of creatives by building their tools out of stolen works.

I say this as one who is in support of trying to create actual AGI and potentially "uplift" species, making humanity less lonely. I think OpenAI doesn't have what it takes and is nothing more than another scam to rob workers of the value of their labor.

[–] General_Effort@lemmy.world 2 points 10 months ago (1 children)

This is the wrong way around. The NYT wants money for the use of its "intellectual property". This is about money for property owners. When building rents go up, you wouldn't expect construction workers to benefit, right?

In fact, more money for property owners means that workers lose out, because where else is the money going to come from? (well, "money")

AI, like all previous forms of automation, allows us to produce more and better goods and services with the same amount of labor. On average, society becomes richer. Whether these gains should go to the rich, or be more evenly distributed, is a choice that we, as a society, make. It's a matter of law, not technology.

The NYT lawsuit is about sending these gains to the rich. The NYT has already made its money from its articles. The authors were paid, in full, and will not get any more money. Giving money to these property owners will not make society any richer. It just moves wealth to property owners for being property owners. It's about more money for the rich.

If OpenAI has to pay these property owners for no additional labor, then it will eventually have to increase subscription fees to balance the cash flow. People, who pay a subscription, probably feel that it benefits them, whether they use it for creative writing, programming, or entertainment. They must feel that the benefit is worth, at least, that much in terms of money.

So, the subscription fees represent a part of the gains to society. If a part of these subscription fees is paid to property owners, who did not contribute anything, then that means that this part of the social gains is funneled to property owners, IE mainly the ultra-rich, simply for being owners/ultra-rich.

[–] nickwitha_k@lemmy.sdf.org 1 points 10 months ago (1 children)

This is the wrong way around. The NYT wants money for the use of its "intellectual property". This is about money for property owners. When building rents go up, you wouldn't expect construction workers to benefit, right?

I do not find that to be an apt analogy. This is more like someone setting up shop in the NYT's lobby, stealing issues, and cutting them up to make their own newspaper that they sell from said lobby, without permission or compensation. OpenAI just refined a technology to parasitize off of others' labor and is using it to seev rent over intellectual property that they don't own or have rights to use.

So, the subscription fees represent a part of the gains to society. If a part of these subscription fees is paid to property owners, who did not contribute anything, then that means that this part of the social gains is funneled to property owners, IE mainly the ultra-rich, simply for being owners/ultra-rich.

I'm going to have to strongly disagree with here. The subscription fees are only going to the ultra-wealthy who are using LLMs to parasitize off of labor. The NYT is not who I'm worried about having their livelihoods destroyed, it's the individual artists, actors, and creatives, as well as those whose jobs are being replaced with terrible chatbots that cannot actually do the work but are implemented anyway to drive lay-offs and boost stock prices. The NYT and other suits are merely a proxy due to the wealth gap leading to it being nearly impossible for those most impacted to successfully utilize the courts to remedy their situation.

[–] General_Effort@lemmy.world 1 points 10 months ago (1 children)

I do not find that to be an apt analogy.

The point is that the people who create some property don't get a cut when the property rises in value. You keep calling the intellectual property of the NYT labor. I think there's something there you seriously misunderstand.

This is more like someone setting up shop in the NYT’s lobby, stealing issues, and cutting them up to make their own newspaper that they sell from said lobby, without permission or compensation.

That's an analogy for a normal practice in journalism. Like when other news media (other websites, TV, radio, ...) reports that on what the NYT reports. I'm sure you have seen articles where it said something like "The NYT reported that...".

That's not what the case is mainly about. I'm not sure if anything like that is even mentioned.

[–] nickwitha_k@lemmy.sdf.org 1 points 10 months ago (1 children)

I think that you are overlooking the part about aggressively competing against the original creation with something that is impossible without the existence of the initial creation. Also the part where the NYT isn't really the ones most impacted by the current pushes for adoption of LLMs and similar tech. It's not a case of punchcard computer operators becoming obsolete. It's a case of using technology to deny those involved in creating and evolving culture along with those in the few remaining jobs that allow one to get by the ability to make a living.

Humanity as a whole isn't benefiting, only the ultra-wealthy who are using and refining these tools for no other purbose but to further bludgeon and dehumanize workers, grow the number on the precipice of total ruin, and increase the wealth gap further. So, the NYT merely is playing the role of "the enemy of my enemy".

If the tools WEREN'T being used primarily to skim even more wealth and push more into poverty, there would be no problems (especially if the result were reform of the currently awful IP laws). But, we currently live in a world where billionaires are writing to profitable tech companies demanding mass lay-offs and deep salary cuts to increase stock prices, voice actors are thrown under the bus by their own union, and eating disorder helpline workers are fired en masse for unionizing to to be replaced with chatbots that cause measurable harm to vulnerable people. OpenAI deserves to be shutdown for the harm that they are enabling and profiting from.

[–] General_Effort@lemmy.world 1 points 10 months ago (1 children)

At first, I laid out how a win for NYT will benefit mainly the wealthy. It will increase the wealth gap. Clearly you don't agree.

Could you please explain where you see an error in my reasoning/where it was not clear enough?

[–] nickwitha_k@lemmy.sdf.org 1 points 10 months ago (1 children)

I think that the error in your reasoning is that OpenAI's tools are themselves greatly accelerating the expansion of the wealth gap. They have been greedily wreckless though and pissed off other wealthy groups. The NYT dosn't care about the rest of us but a victory from them might help establish precedents that help.

To put it another way, both orgs are terrible but, by negative impact on humanity, OpenAI is, measurably, magnitudes worse in multiple ways (harming workers, driving up demand for compute thus accelerating fossil fuel demand and global warming).

Would you be able to clarify your reasoning for thinking that OpenAI is less harmful?

[–] General_Effort@lemmy.world 1 points 10 months ago (1 children)

It's not about who is less harmful. It is about what the effects of the precedent would be.

The precedent would be that the NYT can charge money for AI training. OpenAI is not likely to disappear if it loses, but even if it did, the NYT would just find some other buyer. A win for the NYT would establish that they can charge money for AI training on their archive. That's pure profit for the owners of the NYT. There is no reason why they should pay the authors again (or the printers, assistants, janitors, and anyone else involved in the making of the articles).

Whatever harm you see coming from OpenAI is not going away if the NYT wins. All a NYT win would mean, is that owners of intellectual property get money without having to do work.

[–] nickwitha_k@lemmy.sdf.org 1 points 10 months ago* (last edited 10 months ago) (1 children)

Whatever harm you see coming from OpenAI is not going away if the NYT wins. All a NYT win would mean, is that owners of intellectual property get money without having to do work.

I don't think that we are entirely on the same page for the impact of the precedent. If the ruling is not comically constrained, it would layout the path forward for other creators and IP owners. The vast majority of which are individuals which are those most harmed.

Honestly, the best possible (though unlikely in the current political climate) outcome would be an overhaul of IP laws to make them in any way sane and legally codify mechanisms to protect workers from career loss due to automation such as taxes on AI and automation tools that replace humans in order to fund re-skilling programs as well as, ideally, publicly-funded organizations to pay cultural workers and remove the possibility of the extinction of the working artist, like is done with Ireland's Art Council progams (I say this as one who works primarily in automation). Without such outcomes or a narrow ruling, yeah, it would effectively be just lead to NYT getting more money.

ETA: While we don't currently seem to be on the same page, I do want to say thank you for the civil conversation and good points, and my apologies for my ADHD habit of getting a bit verbose.

[–] General_Effort@lemmy.world 2 points 9 months ago

[I]t would layout the path forward for other creators and IP owners. The vast majority of which are individuals which are those most harmed.

Everyone owns some property, but a tiny percentage of rich people own most of all property. EG quick google says that a daily newspaper contains 50,000 to 200,000 words. That's about as much as a novel. Seems about right. So in even a few months, a single newspaper exceeds the lifetime output of any single author.

It gets worse. Something like ChatGPT is trained on several hundred billion words. So even the NYT couldn't negotiate for more than a tiny part of the training data. For a single individual, the share would be so small, that the bureaucracy of handling the payments would eat a chunk. They'd have to go through middle men, like established publishers or stock photo site. So, a part of any money for "creators", would still be redirected to the rich. You can google how much shutterstock contributors get for the image AI trained on that data.

Mind that companies like Meta and Apple have their fingers on a lot of user data. They can use their TOS to train on that data. In the long run, it would only get worse because AI companies have their fingers on the creations.

Eventually, our system relies on the fact that people have to do something for others to get money. Even people like Zuckerberg or Bezos built companies that provided services that people wanted. The problem with Big Tech, with "enshittification", is that these companies are now in a position where they don't have to do that anymore. Anything that makes it possible to extract money just for being the owner of some property will make everything worse.

In Japan the law is that you can train AI on anything, unless it is a dataset made specifically for AI training (IIRC). You don't exactly need this provision. You would not put such a dataset on the open internet, if you don't want it to be free. But it might come in handy if a dataset gets leaked.


I am certain that human artists will not disappear any time soon. It's true that skill at manual drawing or painting is made less important. Digital artists, so far, could not emulate these looks well, certainly not without manually drawing on a graphics tablet. But digital artists are still working artists. I would think that the digital part of the skill set was already, pre-AI, the commercially more lucrative part.

I can see that genAI disrupts particular income streams, such as stock photography, or small commissions to draw role-playing characters. However, that does not mean that there will be a net loss of artist jobs or income. Say, pre-AI you could spend your limited money to either commission a single drawing or on a night out. Post-AI you might get 10 or a hundred images for the same money. You might be more inclined to take the images over the night out. In that case, waiters and bartenders would take the hit, and would have to become digital artists.

It's impossible to predict the eventual outcome. It depends on what people chose, what people value; on fashion. I am certain of one thing, though. As we need less and less labor to satisfy our basic needs, we will invest more into leisure, entertainment and such. Why is barista a thing? The luxury of a freshly made coffee, prepared with skill, has become fashionable.

Incidentally, the same worries (and mean-spirited attacks) also existed when photography was invented.

I agree on the social programs but I must point out that the issue is not new (and I'm not talking about photography or digital art). Which is why such programs exist, to some degree. We accept that this happens continuously for blue collar jobs and not just because of automation. We're not just making more and better robots, we're also switching from fossil fuels to renewables, from combustion engines to electric, and so on.

You may have heard of the loss of factory jobs over the last couple decades as a social issue. Automation has been blamed for the so-called hollowing out of the middle class. These former middle class jobs have disappeared, freeing up workers to EG deliver food. So you're left with jobs that require a university degree at the top and a driving license at the bottom.

What's new is that AI is coming for white collar jobs. I think that explains a lot of the reaction. It's the people who think and write in newspapers and on the internet who have reason to worry about their cushy careers. The threat is to people like them and the people they know; their class, if you will. I believe (and hope) that AI will benefit society by putting everyone into the same boat again. If (or when) an apprentice electrician can do the same task as an electrical engineer with a Master's degree, then the middle is no more hollow. Sure, the engineer loses out, but people on average are richer and more equal in income.

The major threat to this scenario is policy choices that entrench elites. The NYT lawsuit is an attempt at just that.


Sorry for the rambling wall of text. Thank you, too, for your politeness. It's perfectly usual to talk past another on occasion. I think many neurotypicals would not have reacted so well to my probing questions.

[–] nexusband@lemmy.world 0 points 10 months ago

Yeah, Anarchy is such a good thing to teach AI, Kids and others...

[–] Smoogs@lemmy.world 3 points 10 months ago* (last edited 10 months ago)

Defending scamming as a business model is not a business model.

[–] dasgoat@lemmy.world 1 points 10 months ago (1 children)

Running AI isn't free, and AI calculations pollute like a motherfucker

This isn't me saying you're wrong on an ethical or judicial standpoint, because on those I agree. It's just that, on a practical level considerations have to be made.

For me, those considerations alone (and a ton of other considerations such as digital slavery, child porn etc) make me just want to pull the plug already.

AI was fun. It's a dumb idea for dumb buzzword spewing silicon valley ghouls. Pull the plug and be done with it.

[–] seliaste@lemmy.blahaj.zone 5 points 10 months ago (1 children)

The thing is that those models aren't even open source, if it was then you could argue that openai's business model is renting processing power. Except they're not so their business model is effectively selling models trained on copyrighted data

[–] dasgoat@lemmy.world 2 points 10 months ago* (last edited 10 months ago)

Plus, they built the whole thing on the basis of "research purposes" when in reality from the very start they intended to use this as a business above all else. But tax benefits, copyright leniency etcetera were used liberally because 'it's just research'.

And then keeping it closed source. The whole thing is a typical silicon valley scam where they will use whatever they can get their grubby little hands on, and when the product is finally here, they make sure to throw it into the world with such a force that legislators can't even respond adequately. That's how they make sure that there will be no legislation on if the whole thing is even legal or ethical to begin with, but merely to keep it contained. From then on, they can just keep everything in courts indefinitely while the product festers like a cancer.

It's the same thing with blockchains basically.

Also, again, digital slavery being used to 'train' models and child porn being used to train them because the web scrapers they used can't and won't discern whatever shit they rake up into the garbled pile of other people's works.

[–] poopkins@lemmy.world 1 points 10 months ago (2 children)

What is unlicensed work? Copyrighted content will not have a licence agreement but this doesn't mean you can freely infringe on copyright law.

[–] makyo@lemmy.world 2 points 10 months ago

By unlicensed I mean works that haven't been licensed IE anything being used without permission or some other right

[–] h3rm17@sh.itjust.works 2 points 10 months ago (1 children)

Stuff lile public domain books, I guess, like alice in wonderland, and cc0 content

[–] poopkins@lemmy.world 1 points 10 months ago

Right: public works are content in the public domain where the copyright has expired and Creative Commons licenced content is, well, licenced.

[–] asdfasdfasdf@lemmy.world 1 points 10 months ago (1 children)

That goes against the fundamental idea of something being unlicensed, meaning there are no repercussions from using the content.

I think what you mean already exists: open source licenses. Some open source licenses stipulate that the material is free, can be modified, etc. and you can do whatever you want with it, but only on the condition that whatever you create is under the same open source license.

[–] makyo@lemmy.world 1 points 10 months ago (1 children)

Ugh I see what you mean - no I mean unlicensed as in 'they didn't bother to license copyrighted works' and public as in 'stuff they scraped from Reddit, Twitter, and etc. without permission from anyone'.

[–] asdfasdfasdf@lemmy.world 1 points 10 months ago
[–] canihasaccount@lemmy.world -1 points 10 months ago (2 children)

Would you, after devoting full years of your adult life to the unpaid work of learning the requisite advanced math and computer science needed to develop such a model, like to spend years more of your life to develop a generative AI model without compensation? Within the US, it is legal to use public text for commercial purposes without any need to obtain a permit. Developers of such models deserve to be paid, just like any other workers, and that doesn't happen unless either we make AI a utility (or something similar) and funnel tax dollars into it or the company charges for the product so it can pay its employees.

I wholeheartedly agree that AI shouldn't be trained on copyrighted, private, or any other works outside of the public domain. I think that OpenAI's use of nonpublic material was illegal and unethical, and that they should be legally obligated to scrap their entire model and train another one from legal material. But developers deserve to be paid for their labor and time, and that requires the company that employs them to make money somehow.

[–] thecrotch@sh.itjust.works 4 points 10 months ago

Would you, after devoting full years of your adult life to the unpaid work of learning the requisite advanced math and computer science needed to develop such a model, like to spend years more of your life to develop a generative AI model without compensation?

No. I wouldn't want to write a kernel from scratch for free either. But Linus Torvalds did. He even found a way to monetize it without breaking any laws.

[–] adrian783@lemmy.world 1 points 10 months ago

then openai should close its doors

[–] ExLisper@linux.community -5 points 10 months ago (1 children)

Also anything produced with solar power should be free.

[–] Prok@lemmy.world 4 points 10 months ago

Yes, good point, resource collection is nearly identical to content generation