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rvztoday at 1:08 AM1 replyview on HN

> It's clear to me that AI training is transformative fair use under existing law. Maybe this will be the case to prove it.

That is not what this case is about. It is more about the illegal violation and piracy of copyrighted content done by Meta for commercial use and Zuck knew they were doing it.

Why did Anthropic settle [0] with a multi-billion dollar payout to authors after commercializing their LLMs that was trained off of copyrighted content that was illegally obtained and kept without the authors permission?

There's a reason why they (Anthropic) did not want it to go to trial. (Anthropic knew they would lose and it would completely bankrupt them in the hundreds of billions.)

AI boosters will do anything to justify the mass piracy and illegal obtainment of copyrighted material for commercial use (not research) which that is not fair use in the US. There is no debate on this. [0]

[0] https://images.assettype.com/theleaflet/2025-09-27/mnuaifvw/...


Replies

visargatoday at 3:43 AM

I think copyright is far for being the most important aspect related to AI, it's geopolitical and economical. And even if it was the most important, there is only a case to be made for 1. that copy used to train models and 2. rare or induced regurgitation by targeted prompting.

The original work is not replicated identically, why would we replicate a work when it can be more easily seen in original or replaced with an alternative options online. We use AI to produce new outputs to new situations. We already have had drives and networking for plain copying.