Just read (most) of the ruling.
The ruling is fine. The judge is not Alsop but he’s not technically incompetent either, which is good.
The torrent comments in general are nothing to get het up about; in summary
1) Meta wanted to download but not upload libgen and Anna’s after they couldn’t find anyone with rights to license that would talk to them.
2) they didn't want to distribute; just download. An engineer put in evidence that they restricted seeding successfully.
3) late in the case Silverman et al claimed while they hadnt been seeding they had been leeching and that counts as distribution (?!)
Judge commented as follows
1. just downloading is probably fine because it could be for purposes of fair use, and fair use concerns generally trump even good faith and fair dealing
2. Nobody could get llama to spit out more than a 60 token quote from a plaintiff book; thus llama is not made for infringement
3. We will need more briefing on this leeching thing which it is alleged is a form of distribution.
The judge lays out what he thinks a workable claim to get to the supreme court would be, which is that these llms defeat the purpose of our copyright laws by reducing the amount of human creativity and expression available to those who want to create economic value through creativity. Eg where will the jobs for biographers go?
I will say that debate is an active topic worldwide right now and a good question, with answers ranging from: “this maximizes human creativity bro” to “laser printers disrupted lead type foundries, that was great” to “nobody will ever write again and we are murdering our creative class and burning down their craftsman mid century modern homes.”
It seems to me this will get taken up next session with SCOTUS but also that it’s a little early; we just don’t know where this is going exactly. Either way, I expect our current judge will learn that leeching is precisely NOT seeding once the defense legal team has time to brief him.
> 1. just downloading is probably fine because it could be for purposes of fair use, and fair use concerns generally trump even good faith and fair dealing
This smells a bit strange to me, it's a "for-profit" company.. Fair use is a bit of pipe-dream here. Also there is no conditions on the source of the content ? If the source was obtained from illegal sources IE illegal distribution of copyrighted materials does that not play a part ?
Also will this set a precedent that if I download HBO's collection but don't seed or use for any commercial reasons it will be considered Fair Use ?
This whole thing just reeks of "rules for thee but not for me".