this post was submitted on 10 Jan 2026
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[–] CosmoNova@lemmy.world 11 points 1 day ago

That‘s what I keep arguing for years. It‘s not so different from printing out frames of a movie, then scanning them again and claim it‘s a completely new art piece. Everything has been altered so much it‘s completely different. However it‘s still very much recognizable with extremely little personal expression involved.

Oh, but you chose the paper and the printer, so it‘s definitely your completely unique work, right? No, of course not.

AI works pretty much the same. You can tell what protected material the LLM was fed by the output of a given prompt. The theft already happened when the model was trained and it‘s not that hard to prove, really.

AI companies get away with the biggest heist in human history by being overwhelming, not by being something completely new and unregulated. Those things are already regulated but being ignored. They have big tech and therefore politics to back them up, but definitely not the written law in any country that protects intellectual property.