What Happened to Piracy? Copyright Enforcement Fades as AI Giants Rise

walterbell | 97 points

Of course real scientists don't publish. Okay I'm trolling but I know that the science published by Google et al has been thoroughly screened for commercial advantage before we see it. Try doing a litt search on hypersonics and you can see where the Russians _stop_ publishing.

Peteragain | 7 hours ago

It turned out laws were only for little people, after all.

lambdaone | an hour ago

Will they rehabilitate Kim Dotcom?

niemandhier | 43 minutes ago

This is pretty clearly an instance of the right people (i.e. rich people) being allowed to pirate, and the poor people get in trouble for copyrighted music in the background of some video clip.

The hypocrisy really grinds my gears.

bediger4000 | 9 hours ago

Copyright is about extracting a perpetual tax on culture from the peasants. It's not about hobbling the march of progress itself, not when the people who get to levy the culture tax will eventually get to cash in on the wonders that will ensue. Didn't anyone ever inform you?

NoMoreNicksLeft | 7 hours ago

AI doesn't violate any copyright laws. When AI companies have been found to violate copyright laws (in ways that have nothing at all to do with AI) they have been sued successfully. There has been no change in enforcement.

terminalshort | 6 hours ago

The use of paywalled scientific articles to train AI is one place where I think we have to just draw the line and say, this has to be allowed or US AI is simply going to get gutted and replaced by international competitors who have no respect for copyright law.

Sorry but this is just a competitive reality and the content matters A LOT. Sucks that Elsevier gambled badly on the scientific community putting up with overpriced subscriptions forever, but their concerns can't dictate national policy on this.

bpodgursky | 10 hours ago