Comment by jacquesm

21 hours ago

I'm not sure what point you are trying to make.

He's making a point about responsibility/liability.

If you only get copyright for the prompt you make, but not the output, then it's like being responsible only for the prompt, but not the output.

Ie he's only responsible for pushing the boulder up the hill. The fact that it rolled down from the hill and crushed someone's house "isn't his fault" (he doesn't get copyright on it).

  • That is not how responsibility works anywhere. If you are stealing a gun and murder someone with that gun, you are still responsible, even if it is not your gun.

  • Well, you are responsible for the consequences. Liability is simply a different thing than copyright.

    • The copyright office says that you don't get copyright because you're not considered the author:

      https://www.copyright.gov/ai/

      >The Office concludes that, given current generally available technology, prompts alone do not provide sufficient human control to make users of an AI system the authors of the output. Prompts essentially function as instructions that convey unprotectible ideas. While highly detailed prompts could contain the user’s desired expressive elements, at present they do not control how the AI system processes them in generating the output.

      If you're not the author then why would you have to be liable for it?

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