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submitted 10 months ago by some_guy@lemmy.sdf.org to c/news@lemmy.world

Millions of articles from The New York Times were used to train chatbots that now compete with it, the lawsuit said.

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

Ok, I see. It's "trickle-down economics". Sorry, if you don't like the term. Feel free to suggest a better one.

The simple fact is, it won't work.

There is no reason for the NYT, or any other newspaper, to share the profit. I'm not saying that none of the owners will, but most won't. Even the generous ones won't bother tracking down former employees or their heirs. In fairness, that's not economics. It's just an observation about how people behave. I do note, though, that you are not actually claiming that the authors will get paid.

It won't make newspapers more profitable, either. The owners of old newspapers will be able to extract a rent for their archives. But where would the extra cash flow for a new newspaper come from? You could say that they have a new potential buyer. But the US population is growing and every new person in the US is a new potential buyer. Every new business is a potential new advertising client. Having a new potential buyer is just not going to make the difference. Although, I do note that you are not actually claiming that this would make newspapers more profitable.

At least I can say that in the last paragraph, you are wrong:

A victory in this court case would strengthen author rights and ownership.

No. It will not strengthen authors. Strengthening ownership strengthens owners. Strengthening ownership of buildings, strengthens landlords and does not strengthen construction workers. They have already been paid in full.

I don't know if the poster, I originally replied to, agrees with you, but I can definitely say that I simply do not share your ideology. I hold the view that intellectual property is a privilege granted by society, for the benefit of society. Call that socialism if you like, it's in the US Constitution. OTOH, You clearly believe that IP entitles someone to a benefit from society, regardless of any harm to society. I don't know if you believe in these suggested trickle-down benefits. I find it disturbing that you actually did not go so far as to make a definitive claim.

[-] assassin_aragorn@lemmy.world 1 points 10 months ago

If IP is freely given to AI developers, and the AI they create is freely given to the public, I have no issue at all. In fact, I'd love for that to happen. What I don't want is what you describe at the end -- companies use public and freely given IP to create a closed product sold for profit. And that's exactly what I see these AI as. As long as they have a premium model, they're benefiting from society and profiting privately.

I think we actually agree on a fundamental level what the ideal situation and dynamic should be. I just think the NYT winning the court case brings us closer to that ideal. And I think we both detest the idea of OpenAI getting rich off of other people.

[-] General_Effort@lemmy.world 0 points 10 months ago

I really doubt we agree on any level. You're pitching a neo-feudal hellhole. I don't know if you believe that you will be one of the lucky few, or if you believe that the magic of the market will fix things. If it's the former, then play the lottery instead. If it's the latter, then you are just wrong. If you believe that you are just arguing for good ole American capitalism, then you are deluding yourself. This is the kind of nonsense that was abolished at the birth of the US, or any other developed nation. It won't work. Never has, never will.

[-] assassin_aragorn@lemmy.world 1 points 10 months ago

We agree that information should be freely given and provided to create products that are freely given and provided. We agree that it's bad for information to be freely given to create products which are sold for private gain.

I'm not sure you're understanding what I'm saying. Do you disagree with any of the above? When it comes to this specific court case, either the NYT will win or OpenAI will win, and I'm saying the NYT winning is the better of the two outcomes. I'm not saying it's the ideal we aspire to by any means.

[-] General_Effort@lemmy.world 0 points 10 months ago

I don't think I agree with any of that. I'm not sure if I understand any of that.

I hold the view that intellectual property is a privilege granted by society, for the benefit of society.

We agree that information should be freely given...

I guess information means facts and data that cannot be intellectual property? I don't necessarily agree that this should be freely given, depending on what "should" means. Unearthing facts takes effort and money. The logic behind some kinds of IP, like patents, is that it is supposed to allow eg inventors to monetize their efforts. Society benefits by having more inventions/information. Put another way, it gives people together a way to pay inventors without working through the government.

In some cases, it would cause disproportionate harm to society to enforce a monopoly on certain information. Say, some newspaper sleuths uncover a corruption scandal. As soon as they publish, all the other news media will pick it up and report on it. I don't think it's a good thing for society that this is so hard to monetize. But I don't have a solution.

... and provided to create products that are freely given and provided.

I've already mentioned that I agree with patents, despite all abuses of the system. Patents provide a more direct incentive than government funding to think of ways of improving things. It also allows people to vote with their wallet, whether the effort is worth it. Electing representatives that decide on taxes and budgets, and watch over government officials giving grants, is extremely indirect. The patent system cannot replace government funding, but I believe that it is a beneficial complement.

We agree that it’s bad for information to be freely given to create products which are sold for private gain.

So, obviously I don't agree with this. In fact, I don't even understand why it would be bad. Why is it bad?

When it comes to this specific court case, either the NYT will win or OpenAI will win, and I’m saying the NYT winning is the better of the two outcomes.

How am I supposed to make sense of that in light of your first paragraph? Apparently, the second sentence ("...sold for private gain") is the absolute, over-riding concern. I don't understand why. I especially don't understand why it is so important to you, that you want to do away with free information if you can't have that.

Obviously, this implies opposition to any kind of "public domain" information (expired patents or copyrights, scientific facts and laws, and so on...), until we have some kind of communist economic system. I don't know if you have thought it through to that point.

this post was submitted on 27 Dec 2023
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