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393 points pyman | 5 comments | | HN request time: 0.442s | source
1. shrubble ◴[] No.44491973[source]
Let’s say my AI company is training an AI on woodworking books and at the end, it will describe in text and wireframe drawings (but not the original or identical photos) how to do a particular task.

If I didn’t license all the books I trained on, am I not depriving the publisher of revenue, given people will pay me for the AI instead of buying the book?

replies(2): >>44491993 #>>44492003 #
2. mathiaspoint ◴[] No.44491993[source]
The same argument applies to someone who learned from the book and wrote an article explaining the idea to someone else.
replies(1): >>44492082 #
3. mrkstu ◴[] No.44492003[source]
If you paid a human author to do the same you’d be breaking no law. Learning is the point of books existing in the first place.
replies(1): >>44494666 #
4. ◴[] No.44492082[source]
5. NoOn3 ◴[] No.44494666[source]
Humans learning, not machines learning is the point of books.