The NYT reports that:
- OpenAI built a tool to transcribe YouTube videos to train its LLMs (likely infringing copyright)
- Greg Brockman personally helped scrape the videos
- OpenAI knew it was a legal gray area
- Google may have used YouTube videos the same way
- Meta avoided…
I don't know what you think, but this seems a bit unfair to me.
My original post with the Saori Kido Athena prompt has 4,000 impressions, while @dvorahfr's post with an image created with my prompt has 30,000.
As for not quoting me as the author, I'm not saying anything,…
Ai art is not protected by copyright. The prompt writer has no rights of ownership over the phrases they have typed into their image generator.
reuters.com/legal/ai-gener…
There is no legal requirement to cite the original prompt writer and anyone is free to use Ai images for personal profit.