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1311 points msoad | 1 comments | | HN request time: 0.204s | source
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sillysaurusx ◴[] No.35393782[source]
On the legal front, I’ve been working with counsel to draft a counterclaim to Meta’s DMCA against llama-dl. (GPT-4 is surprisingly capable, but I’m talking to a few attorneys: https://twitter.com/theshawwn/status/1641841064800600070?s=6...)

An anonymous HN user named L pledged $200k for llama-dl’s legal defense: https://twitter.com/theshawwn/status/1641804013791215619?s=6...

This may not seem like much vs Meta, but it’s enough to get the issue into the court system where it can be settled. The tweet chain has the details.

The takeaway for you is that you’ll soon be able to use LLaMA without worrying that Facebook will knock you offline for it. (I wouldn’t push your luck by trying to use it for commercial purposes though.)

Past discussion: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=35288415

I’d also like to take this opportunity to thank all of the researchers at MetaAI for their tremendous work. It’s because of them that we have access to such a wonderful model in the first place. They have no say over the legal side of things. One day we’ll all come together again, and this will just be a small speedbump in the rear view mirror.

EDIT: Please do me a favor and skip ahead to this comment: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=35393615

It's from jart, the author of the PR the submission points to. I really had no idea that this was a de facto Show HN, and it's terribly rude to post my comment in that context. I only meant to reassure everyone that they can freely hack on llama, not make a huge splash and detract from their moment on HN. (I feel awful about that; it's wonderful to be featured on HN, and no one should have to share their spotlight when it's a Show HN. Apologies.)

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1. sva_ ◴[] No.35394431[source]
Thank you for putting your ass on the line and deciding to challenge $megacorp on their claims of owning the copyright on NN weights that have been trained on public (and probably, to some degree, also copyrighted) data. This seems to very much be uncharted territory in the legal space, so there are a lot of unknowns.

I don't consider it ethical to compress the corpus of human knowledge into some NN weights and then closing those weights behind proprietary doors, and I hope that legislators will see this similarly.

My only worry is that they'll get you on some technicality, like that (some version of) your program used their servers afaik.