发生了什么关于盗版? 随着人工智能巨头的崛起,版权执法正在减弱。
What Happened to Piracy? Copyright Enforcement Fades as AI Giants Rise

原始链接: https://www.leefang.com/p/what-happened-to-piracy-copyright

人工智能的兴起深刻改变了版权执法格局,揭示了科技行业内部的惊人虚伪。数十年间,微软等公司积极追究版权侵权行为,游说更严格的法律并起诉像艾伦·斯沃茨这样的人。现在,与微软、Meta、谷歌等公司却被指控*大规模*利用受版权保护的材料来训练其人工智能模型。 政府没有采取行动打击盗版,而是眼睁睁地看着科技巨头从已知的盗版网站(包括托管在俄罗斯服务器上的臭名昭著的平台)上吸取数据。作者和作家提起的诉讼凸显了这种双重标准,指控未经授权使用他们的作品,且未支付报酬或获得同意。 内部文件显示,包括马克·扎克伯格在内的顶级高管知晓甚至批准使用非法获取的内容。这种转变表明,曾经是版权执法的科技行业,现在已成为其最大的涉嫌侵权者,将人工智能开发置于知识产权之上。

黑客新闻 新 | 过去 | 评论 | 提问 | 展示 | 招聘 | 提交 登录 发生了什么海盗行为? 随着人工智能巨头的崛起,版权执法正在减弱 (leefang.com) 13 分,由 walterbell 1 小时前 | 隐藏 | 过去 | 收藏 | 1 条评论 bpodgursky 22 分钟前 [–] 将付费墙科学文章用于训练人工智能是一个我认为我们必须划清界限的地方,必须允许这样做,否则美国的人工智能将被削弱并被对版权法毫无尊重的国际竞争对手取代。很抱歉,这只是竞争的现实,而且内容非常重要。Elsevier 赌注失败,认为科学界会永远忍受过高的订阅费用,但他们的担忧不能决定国家政策。回复 考虑申请 YC 的 2026 年冬季批次! 申请截止日期为 11 月 10 日 指南 | 常见问题解答 | 列表 | API | 安全 | 法律 | 申请 YC | 联系方式 搜索:
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原文

The artificial intelligence revolution threatens to uproot entire professions, replace millions of workers, and reshape industrial relations. Much ink has been spilled on the ways in which AI influence has already taken root. Wall Street and Washington, D.C., are both betting on the technology to power the future of American innovation.

But little has been said about how the industry has already seized control over key components of American governance. Look no further than the quiet shifts in the application of copyright law.

Since the mid-nineties, software giants led by Microsoft have waged a global war against copyright infringement and online piracy. They bankrolled groups like the Business Software Alliance to demand increased penalties for copyright violations and pressured FBI agents to raid foreign hosts accused of harboring illicit content-sharing servers. For the old software model, duplicated Microsoft Office disks and fake software licenses posed the greatest risk.

Then-Microsoft Deputy General Counsel Brad Smith, in a 2001 interview with the Wall Street Journal, championed the crusade against digital theft as part of a sprawling battle against “organized criminal enterprises.” The company and its allies marshaled their resources to encourage the federal government to crack down on foreign piracy sites, especially illegal file-sharing firms based in Russia, Hong Kong, and Brazil.

In a case that signified this old era of aggressive copyright enforcement, the Justice Department in 2011 pursued criminal charges against Aaron Swartz, a young open internet activist, for downloading JSTOR’s repository of scholarly papers without authorization. Faced with the prospect of decades in prison, he died by suicide during the prosecution.

Much has changed since advances in artificial intelligence have made the technology the focal point of Silicon Valley innovation. Smith is now president of Microsoft, and the company and its partner OpenAI—which exclusively runs on Microsoft’s Azure cloud computing network and was backed with $13.75 billion in investment funds from Microsoft—are at the center of a very different type of copyright dispute. This time, as the power of the tech industry still looms over Washington, D.C., prosecutors are less interested in going after those suspected of engaging in illegal downloads of copyrighted work.

That is because it is now the tech giants that are accused of exploiting pirated content on an industrial scale. Meta, Anthropic, Microsoft, Google, xAI, and OpenAI are competing to vacuum up as much data as humanly possible in a race to develop their respective AI models. The most prized training data, it turns out, are vast quantities of copyrighted material, largely in the form of published works such as academic articles, novels, and nonfiction books.

After decades of FBI warnings about copyright violations and the dangers of piracy, suddenly the federal government is no longer interested in such crimes. That has left law enforcement in the hands of civil litigation class actions, many of which have been filed by authors and writers noting that tech giants are now plundering their works for AI training without authorization, payment, or notification.

The court cases have cast a spotlight on a stratospheric level of hypocrisy. Microsoft, which once cast peer-to-peer and dark web piracy sites as an existential threat that cost the economy billions of dollars in damages, allegedly taps the very same types of illicit forums for a huge range of copyrighted academic articles, novels, and nonfiction.

The AI giants have all but admitted that they have developed their most advanced models by tapping into mass piracy. The lawsuit Kadrey et al. v. Meta Platforms revealed that Meta, the parent company of Facebook, used a mirror of Library Genesis, a notorious library of pirated books hosted on Russian servers, to train its generative AI systems.

Tech executives have pressed for licensing deals with some publishers—but in many cases have gone ahead with simply stealing millions of books and articles via known piracy sites on the dark web and other illicit forums. The litigation produced emails and documents showing Meta employees admitting that “torrenting from a [Meta-owned] corporate laptop doesn’t feel right 😃.” In one exchange, engineers noted that use of the illegal content had been escalated to Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg (referred to as “MZ”) and that the decision was “approved to use.”

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