• OutrageousHairdo [he/him]@hexbear.net
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    8 months ago

    Well I disagree. You should have a fundamental right to opt out of these things. Even in a perfect world where everything is just and every artist can support themselves, I see no reason it shouldn’t require the creator’s consent. Surely, with no financial pressures to corrupt things, many creatives would willingly contribute to these models, and we wouldn’t need to resort to this ugly, non-consensual scraping.

      • OutrageousHairdo [he/him]@hexbear.net
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        8 months ago

        I just think, fundamentally, there should be some level of control the artist has over these things. You asked me earlier if art should “belong to everyone”, and I guess I don’t think it should, at least not fully or without restriction. I’m not against stuff like fanart and fanfiction and things like that, not in the slightest, but the idea of having my work taken in that way, mechanistically, even in a non-artistic context, like the conversation we’re having right now, feels so thoroughly violating that I just can’t support it. It feels like in the minds of a lot of people, the only option an artist should have to avoid these things, to avoid being scraped, is to seclude themselves, or at least their work, and to completely shut people off from experiencing it. I don’t want that, but I don’t want to be scraped either. Is it so strange? Am I really the weird one for wanting a middle ground, where the humans are allowed to see me and the AI isn’t?

        • JohnBrownNote [comrade/them, des/pair]@hexbear.net
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          8 months ago

          i think that feeling is probably rooted in capitalism and precarity? whatever fan works you’re imagining and fan works “with an advanced computer” are the same.

          i do think we should have some protection against e.g. political candidates we don’t endorse using our art, or corporations profiting from our work, but something automatic like how covers work in music seems pretty sane.

          Since the Copyright Act of 1909, United States musicians have had the right to record a version of someone else’s previously recorded and released tune, whether it is music alone or music with lyrics. A license can be negotiated between representatives of the interpreting artist and the copyright holder, or recording published tunes can fall under a mechanical license whereby the recording artist pays a standard royalty to the original author/copyright holder […] even if they do not have any permission from the original author.

          rare copyright law w.

          if somebody wants to make art and not actually share it for metaphysical reasons i really don’t respect that and don’t think shit like city or asinine stunts should be validated, but that’s a huge tangent.

          • OutrageousHairdo [he/him]@hexbear.net
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            8 months ago

            Again, I’m not against any kind of voluntary arragement, but the first part of this comment, the first two sentences, just don’t feel right to me. I’m writing an effortpost as we speak, maybe I’ll put that up later. Still gotta organize my thoughts on that.