the robots are taking over copyright law
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En réponse à @sarahjeong
no one, neither EFF for
#lenz nor Universal is willing to posit what an acceptable scalable system is going to look like2 réponses 3 Retweets 4 j'aime -
En réponse à @sarahjeong
@sarahjeong sort of related, ContentID has problems but at least when it’s overbroad, it’s not an abuse of the legal system1 réponse 0 Retweet 1 j'aime -
En réponse à @bergmayer
@bergmayer yes it's an extralegal robot regime that poses speech issues but isn't illegal1 réponse 0 Retweet 2 j'aime -
En réponse à @sarahjeong
@bergmayer this is what I mean by "the robots are taking over"1 réponse 0 Retweet 2 j'aime -
En réponse à @sarahjeong
@sarahjeong gotcha. True statement in a number of contexts. RIP humanity

1 réponse 0 Retweet 1 j'aime -
En réponse à @bergmayer
@bergmayer yeah I'm very troubled by the trend. been thinking a lot about the paper@grimmelm presented at the algorithms conference1 réponse 0 Retweet 0 j'aime -
En réponse à @sarahjeong
@sarahjeong the solution to an automated takedown system that respects fair use is the same as for automatic bluebooking: Strong AI1 réponse 0 Retweet 0 j'aime -
En réponse à @bergmayer
@bergmayer lol. but both tasks can certainly be aided by automation if human-directed.2 réponses 0 Retweet 0 j'aime -
En réponse à @sarahjeong
@bergmayer tbh at this point I'm not sure what to think about Lenz in the context of today. 8 years later it's less vital to fixing all this1 réponse 0 Retweet 0 j'aime
@bergmayer a good decision in Lenz could help, a bad decision would break 512, but the extralegal regimes are now the center
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