Comment by jahewson 2 years ago No, fortunately random hosts on the internet don’t get to write a letter and make something a crime. 4 comments jahewson Reply throwaway_fai 2 years ago Unless they're a big company in which case they can DMCA anything they want, and they get the benefit of the doubt. BehindBlueEyes 2 years ago Can you even DMCS takedown crawlers? throwaway_fai 2 years ago Doubt it, a vanilla cease-and-desist letter would probably be the approach there. I doubt any large AI company would pay attention though, since, even if they're in the wrong, they can outspend almost anyone in court. 1 reply →
throwaway_fai 2 years ago Unless they're a big company in which case they can DMCA anything they want, and they get the benefit of the doubt. BehindBlueEyes 2 years ago Can you even DMCS takedown crawlers? throwaway_fai 2 years ago Doubt it, a vanilla cease-and-desist letter would probably be the approach there. I doubt any large AI company would pay attention though, since, even if they're in the wrong, they can outspend almost anyone in court. 1 reply →
BehindBlueEyes 2 years ago Can you even DMCS takedown crawlers? throwaway_fai 2 years ago Doubt it, a vanilla cease-and-desist letter would probably be the approach there. I doubt any large AI company would pay attention though, since, even if they're in the wrong, they can outspend almost anyone in court. 1 reply →
throwaway_fai 2 years ago Doubt it, a vanilla cease-and-desist letter would probably be the approach there. I doubt any large AI company would pay attention though, since, even if they're in the wrong, they can outspend almost anyone in court. 1 reply →
Unless they're a big company in which case they can DMCA anything they want, and they get the benefit of the doubt.
Can you even DMCS takedown crawlers?
Doubt it, a vanilla cease-and-desist letter would probably be the approach there. I doubt any large AI company would pay attention though, since, even if they're in the wrong, they can outspend almost anyone in court.
1 reply →