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submitted 8 hours ago* (last edited 8 hours ago) by carotte@lemmy.blahaj.zone to c/curatedtumblr@sh.itjust.works

Show transcriptScreenshot of a tumblr post by hbmmaster:

the framing of generative ai as “theft” in popular discourse has really set us back so far like not only should we not consider copyright infringement theft we shouldn’t even consider generative ai copyright infringement

who do you think benefits from redefining “theft” to include “making something indirectly derivative of something created by someone else”? because I can assure you it’s not artists

okay I’m going to mute this post, I’ll just say,

if your gut reaction to this is that you think this is a pro-ai post, that you think “not theft” means “not bad”, I want you to think very carefully about what exactly “theft” is to you and what it is about ai that you consider “stealing”.

do you also consider other derivative works to be “stealing”? (fanfiction, youtube poops, gifsets) if not, why not? what’s the difference? because if the difference is actually just “well it’s fine when a person does it” then you really should try to find a better way to articulate the problems you have with ai than just saying it’s “stealing from artists”.

I dislike ai too, I’m probably on your side. I just want people to stop shooting themselves in the foot by making anti-ai arguments that have broader anti-art implications. I believe in you. you can come up with a better argument than just calling it “theft”.

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[-] Tar_alcaran@sh.itjust.works 5 points 41 minutes ago

The premise here is wrong.

The theft isn't "ai made a derivative work". The theft is "human ai bros scraped all the stuff I made, without permission or compensation, and used it as training data".

The problem is that art is being used for purposes the artist explicitly disagrees with. Imagine your artwork as a backdrop for company that steals candy from babies to feed elephant poachers. In a normal world, you can at least sue that company to take it down.

But when OpenAI uses your artwork to pump thousands of tons of CO2 into the air, you can't do shit, and according to OP, you shouldn't even complain about your work being taken.

[-] mindbleach@sh.itjust.works 2 points 33 minutes ago

Lemmy's respect for copyright only in relation to the magic content robot is endlessly amusing.

I don't give a shit what public data gets shredded into a gigabyte of linear algebra. That process is transformative. If the result is any good at reproducing a specific input, you did it wrong.

[-] Rentlar@lemmy.ca 2 points 54 minutes ago* (last edited 49 minutes ago)

I agree with the comment here that AI image generation is more like piracy in that you are appropriating other artists' works without their permission.

So I mean personally I agree that AI art is soulless but not copyright infringement or theft, whereas for people that consider piracy theft, calling AI art "theft" is not an inconsistent or hypocritical argument, in my opinion. Machine or human doesn't make it stealing or not.

I mean even Zuck's Meta is claiming in court that they aren't stealing books when torrenting massive amounts of them for AI training, lol, so he's consistent there. But Nintendo on the other hand are probably seething at AI Nintendo art being "stolen" from them.

[-] tyler@programming.dev 3 points 1 hour ago

“It’s fine if a person does it” is a fantastic argument. Saying that it’s ok to allow robots to continue to replace every part of human life will only lead to suffering for literally everything in existence. Computers can destroy and create in milliseconds what might take humans a lifetime to achieve. If this isn’t an incredibly good reason to regulate the shit out of ai then what is?!?!?

Like yes, currently generative AI use is incredibly difficult to get something non-derivative, e.g. using it as a tool like Photoshop. But that most definitely will not be the case in a few years. This is by far the steepest, slipperiest, most ridiculous slope we could be on and it’s not even close.

This is the biggest problem with technology, regulation is reactionary and not preemptory. Not taking action immediately has already gotten earth into a ridiculously bad situation. If we continue to allow it it’s only going to get worse and harder to undo.

[-] Endymion_Mallorn@kbin.melroy.org 7 points 3 hours ago

Yep. I really hope that the conversation around LLMs moves away from words like "theft". Show me evidence of an artwork that an LLM has concealed artwork from the public. I've looked, and all that I've found is that they make more media more accessible. That's not theft. That's piracy. That's culture-jamming.

So if you want to call it appropriation, fine. It's classic EEE methods, applied to Gonzo, Dada & Punk ideas. Embrace - taking in everything and culture-jamming with meaningless text & images (painfully Dada). Extend - by turning this into both a toy and a corpo "tool", they extended Dada into programming, articles, news media, you name it. Extinguish - when everything is a punk remix, or everything is meaningless Dada, nothing is. Therefore the true punks will be the classicist, reconstructionists, the Bible-beaters, and their ilk. And then Punk is dead.

[-] SqueakyBeaver@lemmy.blahaj.zone 1 points 2 hours ago

Disclaimer: I've not workshopped this much, so idk if these are the right words to convey how I feel

I feel like using AI to generate images is akin to taking someone's art and applying a light gaussian blur to it or putting an uncredited artist's work in a big game.

I know it's done in a much more intricate way, and it's genuinely impressive how AI companies got it to work so well, but if I try to sell AI generated images, especially if they're meant to be made similar to an artist's work, then that's all I'm doing.

I don't necessarily see it as stealing from artists (though it is threatening the livelihood of a lot of artists), but more as exploiting artists but with a new buzzword.

If I arrange 4 pieces of art in a jpeg and then apply a whacky filter, am I actually creating anything, or am I just exploiting artists and doing something similar to copying and pasting different bits of an essay and then changing every instance of a word to a different synonym?

I believe AI does something similar to that, albeit in a more sophisticated way that looks like creativity.

[-] Susaga@sh.itjust.works 20 points 5 hours ago* (last edited 5 hours ago)

AI images try to replicate the style of popular artists by using their work, often including work that was behind a paywall and taken without payment, thus denying the artists revenue. AI has taken something from the artist, and cost the artist money. Until such a time as we come up with a new word for this new crime, we'll call it by the closest equivalent: theft.

Also, someone did an experiment and typed "movie screenshot" into an AI and it came back with a nearly identical image from Endgame. Not transformative enough to be anything but copyright infringement.

[-] PlzGivHugs@sh.itjust.works 3 points 3 hours ago* (last edited 3 hours ago)

AI images try to replicate the style of popular artists by using their work, often including work that was behind a paywall and taken without payment, thus denying the artists revenue. AI has taken something from the artist, and cost the artist money. Until such a time as we come up with a new word for this new crime, we'll call it by the closest equivalent: theft.

I'd argue it's much closer to piracy or freebooting. Generally, its use doesn't hurt artists, seeing as a random user isn't going to spend hundreds or thousands to hire a talented artist to create shitposts for them. Doesn't necessary make it okay, but it also doesn't directly hurt anyone. In cases of significant commercial use, or copyright infringement, I'd argue its closer to freebooting: copying another's work, and using it for revenue without technically directly damaging the original. Both of these are crimes, but both are more directly comparable and less severe than actual theft, seeing as the artist loses nothing.

Also, someone did an experiment and typed "movie screenshot" into an AI and it came back with a nearly identical image from Endgame. Not transformative enough to be anything but copyright infringement.

Copyrighted material is fed into an AI as part of how it works. This doesn't mean than anything that comes out of it is or is not copyrighted. Copyrighted matterial is also used in Photoshop, for example, but as long as you don't use Photoshop to infringe on somsone else's copyright, there isn't anything intrinsically wrong with Photoshop's output.

Now, if your compaint is that much of the training data is pirated or infringes on the licensing its released under, thats another matter. Endgame isn't a great example, given that it can likely be bought with standard copyright limitations, and ignoring that, its entirely possible Disney has been paid for their data. We do know huge amounts of smaller artists have had their work pirated to train AI, though, and because of the broken nature of our copyright system, they have no recourse - not through the fault of AI, but corrupt, protectionist governments.

All that said, theres still plenty of reasons to hate AI (and esspecially AI companies) but I don't think the derivative nature of the work is the primary issue. Not when they're burning down the planet, flooding our media with propaganda, and bribing goverments, just to create derivative, acceptable-at-best """art""". Saying AI is the problem is an oversimplification - we can't just ban AI to solve this. Instead, we need to address the problematic nature of our copyright laws, legal system, and governments.

[-] Kernal64@sh.itjust.works 9 points 5 hours ago

"I believe in you. You can come up with a better argument than just theft."

Nah, fuck that shit. It OOP feels so strongly that it's not theft and they wanna change how the population at large is referring to something, then it's on them to provide an alternative and convince others. This weird ass attempt to shame people into doing things their way, especially when they haven't really defined what they consider their way, is absolute horse shit.

This whole post is full of this. The OOP tries to completely remove intent and method from the analysis of whether something is art theft. Those things absolutely factor into it and they're only discounting them in order to push their weird narrative.

AI scrapping tons of work belonging to artists and then regurgitating that as original work is fucking gross, no matter what you call it. Theft seems fine to me, but I am open to calling it something else. Unfortunately OOP won't be the I've to convince me since they neither provide reasoning for why calling it theft is bad or what we should call it instead and why.

[-] Endymion_Mallorn@kbin.melroy.org 4 points 3 hours ago

The alternative is to call out copywrong in every version and every facet of existence. This isn't theft, it's duplication. The argument is simple: LLMs are the new printing press.

[-] einlander@lemmy.world 17 points 7 hours ago

Yeah, I don't agree. Unfortunately I'm not articulate enough to explain why I feel this way. I feel like they are glossing over things. How would you describe corporations willfully taking art/data/content form others without any permission, attribution, or payment and creating a tool with said information for the end goal of making profits by leveraging the work of others into a derivative work that completes with the original?(Holy run on sentence) If there is a better word or term than theft for what generative ai does then they should use it instead.

[-] rumschlumpel@feddit.org 11 points 7 hours ago* (last edited 6 hours ago)

It's basically for-profit piracy. Which is still kind of a shitty term because actual pirates weren't copying any of the goods they were taking.

The most neutral term might be copyright infringement, though that carries all the baggage of the 'should copyright even exist'-discussion.

Alternatively, you could shout 'they took our jobs' to complain that they are letting algorithms and engineers do the work that artists want to do. IDK what to call this, but 'theft' or 'robbery' doesn't sound right.

[-] valaramech@fedia.io 5 points 4 hours ago

I think the biggest problem is that the idea of copyright is good, but the implementation - in most places, anyways - is complete dogshit.

Like, I'm fairly certain the original implementation of copyright in the US only lasted 10 years or thereabouts. Like, that's more than enough time to profit off whatever you made but short enough that it'll be usable by others within their lifetimes. This whole "life of the author + 100 years" shit needs to die.

[-] carotte@lemmy.blahaj.zone 1 points 7 hours ago

i get what you mean, but at the same time, i feel like there's not much you can do with AI that you can't do without it (at least, in terms of art), it just takes more time and you'd most likely need to pay someone to do it. so in this case AI would take work opportunities away from people, that's bad, but that's not copyright infringement nor theft.

and i'm worried that by propagating the idea that training an AI model is theft, that it could lead to even more regulation on copyright that would just end up hurting smaller artists in the end. like, most people agree that making AI art in the style of Studio Ghibli movies is scummy, but would an indie artist making art in that style be wrong too? you may think not, but if it becomes a crime to emulate an art style using AI, it takes very little extrapolation to make it a crime to emulate an art style without AI. and do i need to say why being able to copyright an art style would be awful?

[-] rumschlumpel@feddit.org 3 points 6 hours ago* (last edited 6 hours ago)

so in this case AI would take work opportunities away from people, that’s bad, but that’s not copyright infringement nor theft.

I think it's quite literally copyright infringement, assuming the models are fed with work from actual artists who typically don't agree to it. Whether copyright should work this way is another matter.

[-] carotte@lemmy.blahaj.zone 2 points 6 hours ago* (last edited 6 hours ago)

I meant it more in a "hire an artist to work on art for you VS just ask the AI to do it instead" way

even if you’re emulating an art style in particular, that’s not copyright infringement because you can’t copyright an art style. which is good because if you could, that would be awful for a ton of artists

it’s only copyright infringement if you ask an AI to do, say, a picture of mario. but in this case, it’s also copyright infringement if you commission an artist to do it!

[-] rumschlumpel@feddit.org 3 points 3 hours ago* (last edited 3 hours ago)

I suppose the issue is whether you want to see training an AI as equivalent to practicing as a human artist. Considering that AIs are generally made specifically as commercial products, I don't think that's really true, but this is definitely something that can be argued one way or the other.

I don't think it would be considered fine under current laws if an AI-free Adobe Photoshop was shipped with tons of copyrighted art that was scraped off the internet without the artists' approval, even if the users aren't allowed to use it to make commercial works that reproduce Super Mario or w/e 1:1.

[-] Lumidaub@feddit.org 7 points 7 hours ago

Fan-created derivative works are usually only tolerated (because even capitalists realise that banning fanart would be economic suicide), they are, strictly taken, already illegal in most places. Yes, even if you don't make money off them. The US fair use thing is an exception and can still be challenged by owners of the IP.

[-] carotte@lemmy.blahaj.zone 10 points 7 hours ago

yea, but that's already a bad thing (IMO, at least)

copyright law is already awful and over-reaching, we shouldn't make it worse!

[-] HeurtisticAlgorithm9@feddit.uk 1 points 5 hours ago

I believe the difference to be that, no matter how much they attempt to copy or derive the art they create a person will always include their own style (for want of a better word). The subtlties from how they learned to draw/paint/whatever, the unconsious biases (good or bad) that lead to their creative decisions. A person imparts themselves, a collection of a lifetime of experiences, unto their art, whether they try to or not. AI does not have these experiences, it can only attempt to recreate from what it has seen. AI cannot add itself to the art it creates, because it doesn't have a self to add. AI art is intrinsically bad because it cannot exist in a vacuum and cannot add anything of artistic value when it exists in a world of artists.

[-] hellfire103@lemmy.ca 3 points 7 hours ago

How do you get this style of thread? I normally can only get the newer, more Twitter-esque UI.

[-] carotte@lemmy.blahaj.zone 7 points 7 hours ago

this is just the theme of their blog!

you can see a blog with it's custom theme by going to [blog name].tumblr.com instead of tumblr.com/[blog name], and by doing this you also get less restrictions (for example, there's no cookie banner or sign-in wall if you scroll too much)

ofc not all blogs have a retro theme like this, in fact many blogs don't have custom themes at all

this post was submitted on 23 May 2025
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