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290 points nobody9999 | 2 comments | | HN request time: 0s | source
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atleastoptimal ◴[] No.45187251[source]
Copying files of scanned books isn’t worth a 1T dollar fine
replies(1): >>45190002 #
adrr ◴[] No.45190002[source]
Maybe Anthropic should have paid attention to the law that has $150k statutory damages per violation if the infringement is willful. So much cheaper just to buy the books and scan it instead of violating a law that has a statutory damage clause.
replies(3): >>45190212 #>>45190597 #>>45191505 #
eschaton ◴[] No.45190597[source]
In general buying books and scanning them for this type of use would *also* be copyright infringement.
replies(1): >>45190652 #
adrr ◴[] No.45190652{3}[source]
No. Thats fair use. Format shifting is fair use as affirmed by RIAA v. Diamond Multimedia which was about ripping CDs to MP3s.
replies(1): >>45190683 #
eschaton ◴[] No.45190683{4}[source]
…for personal use, just as timeshifting was with MPAA v. Sony. Neither were about commercial use/exploitation.
replies(1): >>45190979 #
1. adrr ◴[] No.45190979{5}[source]
Meta case just affirmed that training an LLM is fair use under transformative use. Alsom, Google's indexing(transformative use) of scanned books is settled law with Authors Guild v. Google.
replies(1): >>45193498 #
2. eschaton ◴[] No.45193498[source]
And Roe v. Wade was settled law too, until it wasn’t.