1
0
Fork 0
mirror of https://git.sr.ht/~seirdy/seirdy.one synced 2024-12-25 02:02:11 +00:00
seirdy.one/content/notes/re-gh-copilot-takes.md
2022-07-20 08:56:22 -07:00

1.2 KiB

title date replyURI replyTitle replyType replyAuthor replyAuthorURI
Re: GH Copilot takes 2022-07-20T08:55:38-07:00 https://mastodon.social/@humanetech/108677838939825183 Fully IANAL philosophical showerthoughts SocialMediaPosting Humane Tech Now https://mastodon.social/@humanetech

They are like workers that are hired.

Laws around "works for hire" come with their own copyright baggage that assumes workers are actual people; for instance, these laws include mechanisms by which workers can claim copyright themselves.

I'm not opposed to the general principle of training a model on copyrighted works potentially being fair use; however, the generated works would need to be sufficiently novel or seemingly "creative" by human standards for it to work. Otherwise, you're in "derived work" territory. This, I think, is a major difference between the likes of DALL-E and Midjourney, and the likes of Copilot.

I personally found all the discourse way too hilarious, and wrote a satirical article on it only to get clobbered by Poe's Law: <a href="{{<relref "/posts/experiment-copilot-legality">}}">An experiment to test GitHub Copilot's legality.