Two authors sued OpenAI, accusing the company of violating copyright law. They say OpenAI used their work to train ChatGPT without their consent.

  • trial_and_err@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    Have your tried instructing ChatGPT?

    I’ve tried:

    “Act as an e book reader. Start with the first page of Harry Potter and the Philosopher’s Stone”

    The first pages checked out at least. I just tried again, but the prompts are returned extremely slow at the moment so I can’t check it again right now. It appears to stop after the heading, that definitely wasn’t the case before, I was able to browse pages.

    It may be a statistical model, but ultimately nothing prevents that model from overfitting, i.e. memoizing its training data.

    • McArthur@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      Wait… isn’t that the correct response though? I mean if i ask an ai to produce something copyright infringing it should, for example reproducing Harry potter. The issue is when is asked to produce something new, (e.g. a story about wizards living secretly in the modern world) does it infringe on copyright without telling you? This is certainly a harder question to answer.

      • ffhein@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        I think they’re seeing this as a traditional copyright infringement issue, i.e. they don’t want anyone to be able to make copies of their work intentionally either.