Tony Bark@pawb.social to Technology@lemmy.worldEnglish · 2 days agoSupreme Court to decide whether ISPs must disconnect users accused of piracyarstechnica.comexternal-linkmessage-square178fedilinkarrow-up1699arrow-down15
arrow-up1694arrow-down1external-linkSupreme Court to decide whether ISPs must disconnect users accused of piracyarstechnica.comTony Bark@pawb.social to Technology@lemmy.worldEnglish · 2 days agomessage-square178fedilink
minus-squareTollana1234567@lemmy.todaylinkfedilinkEnglisharrow-up22arrow-down2·2 days agodint they just rule AI can legally scrape/books, but not for people who are pirating directly.
minus-squareSaharaMaleikuhm@feddit.orglinkfedilinkEnglisharrow-up18·1 day agoThe US is such a silly place. Everything is so wrong.
minus-squarelepinkainen@lemmy.worldlinkfedilinkEnglisharrow-up11·1 day agoIIRC the judge said they could use the data for training, but specifically added that piracy is still piracy and he didn’t rule on that. So Disney can just sue Meta for one trillion 😀
minus-squarejumping_redditor@sh.itjust.workslinkfedilinkEnglisharrow-up3·1 day agoso then individuals could just train a model locally on the shittiest hardware they have
dint they just rule AI can legally scrape/books, but not for people who are pirating directly.
The US is such a silly place. Everything is so wrong.
IIRC the judge said they could use the data for training, but specifically added that piracy is still piracy and he didn’t rule on that.
So Disney can just sue Meta for one trillion 😀
so then individuals could just train a model locally on the shittiest hardware they have