Which begs the question: If it's actually fair use, why are they trying
so hard to hide it?
"Fair Use" = "I saw it on the internet once."

Which begs the question: If it's actually fair use, why are they trying
so hard to hide it?
Which begs the question: If it's actually fair use, why are they trying so hard to hide it?
I imagine there are actual technical secrets there that companies wouldn't want out in the public. They are also in a competitive market place and don't want to help the competition out.
Mm. Okay. Technical secrets like which writers they're stealing from, I guess.
I fail to see how disclosing what copyrighted material they're using is a "technical secret".
AI companies that are developing “general purpose AI models,” such as language models, will also need to create and keep technical documentation showing how they built the model, how they respect copyright law, and publish a publicly available summary of what training data went into training the AI model.
From your post…
Should we also get the library records/book purchases of every writer out there to make sure they haven’t borrowed something from something that they read?
Technical documentation of how the built the model is exactly what I said. It's a legalistic way of stating "We're going to see whose copyrighted material you are using".
And you're acting like real people don't get hit with the plagiarism button all the time.
But, one would still have to prove that how AI learns is any different than how a human gains information and that their specific work is being used.
Why? M$-Word has a built-in grammar / punctuation checker that's 90+% accurate.Someone on my fanfiction group on FB said earlier today that she likes to use Chat GPT to check her punctuation.
How they built the model is, but the model by itself is blank and generic. The training data is what we're talking about and that should be public. ChatGPT sometimes can directly replicate its source material if you give it a prompt it was trained on, and can give the same exact answer to multiple people, both of which are copyright nightmares.“How they built the model” would likely include trade secrets on how each company is creating the hardware/software for their version of AI.
A list of materials is fine, anything beyond that will never fly.
But, one would still have to prove that how AI learns is any different than how a human gains information and that their specific work is being used.
...ChatGPT sometimes can directly replicate its source material if you give it a prompt it was trained on, and can give the same exact answer to multiple people, both of which are copyright nightmares.
I have no idea. I think she said English isn't her first language, so maybe that's a reason?Why? M$-Word has a built-in grammar / punctuation checker that's 90+% accurate.
I have found that most of the writing in my scifi stories is standard. For the 1 to 5 percent of the made-up terms, sentence structures, punctuation emphasis that I add, I have a choice to either add the term to the user dictionary or ignore the computer's suggestion. That way, I still benefit from the service offered from a spell check and grammar check computer-driven program and have the flexibility of doing my own thing.The problem with using anything commercially programmed is if you write a lot of fanfic that uses dialects that have non-standard grammar, MS Word is basically pointless. It's programmed for standard American English, which means that there are normal Canadian words that get flagged, never mind something that's written for a science fiction/fantasy-themed fanfic.
(sic)...live witmy all my mistakes...
...It is up to me as to weather I have used the word I meant to use our whether I let the computer...
Actually, that was not on purpose, but it does work. And, three words before your quote starts, it should have been the word 'off' not 'of'.(sic)
I'm far from certain you didn't do that on purpose. It's far too ironically case in point...
There's a third way to spell that word: wether. And it you look it up, you will NEVER use it in the wrong context!!It is up to me as to weather I have used the word I meant to use our whether I let the computer be the author of my thoughts.
Poor Sheep.There's a third way to spell that word: wether. And it you look it up, you will NEVER use it in the wrong context!!
And it you look
AI's are very flawed
How they built the model is, but the model by itself is blank and generic. The training data is what we're talking about and that should be public. ChatGPT sometimes can directly replicate its source material if you give it a prompt it was trained on, and can give the same exact answer to multiple people, both of which are copyright nightmares.
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