• TheFogan@programming.dev
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    16 hours ago

    I mean isn’t that at least some extent technically true to a level.

    I mean if we weren’t talking a shitty corporation to begin with. If this were say, a 20 year old mcdonnalds worker pirating game of thrones.

    IMO the bigger concept is still rather than if they got it… defining whether using that data after the fact is legal. I mean hypothetically speaking lets just say they bought 1 copy of each of the millions of books, or bought used copies, or say had a machine that could scan every book in a library. IMO the issue shouldn’t be whether or not anyone managed to download the books in their pure form afterwards. The focus should be the AI trained on their books, is going to be distributing portions of their book to millions of people, and any potential profits of such will be going to meta and uncredited to the original authors. The idea that meta’s involvement in torrenting may have let little timmy get a copy of his text book 15 seconds faster… shouldn’t be the driving force here.

    • Ulrich@feddit.org
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      16 hours ago

      I mean isn’t that at least some extent technically true to a level.

      It’s completely true. That’s why a lot of people don’t seed. And why your ISP won’t bother you if you don’t.