AI Algorithms Are Not Pirates, Just Misunderstood
September 11, 2025
Let’s be clear: AI algorithms are computer programs designed to imitate human brains. They’re not sentient . They are taught using huge amounts of data sets that contain pirated information. By proxy this makes AI developers thieves. David Carson on Medium wrote, “Theft Is Not Fair Use” arguing that AI is not abiding by one of the biggest laws that powers YouTube. (One of the big AI outfits just wrote a big check for unauthorized content suck downs. Not guilty, of course.)
Publishers, record labels, entertainment companies, and countless artists are putting AI developers on notice by filing lawsuits against AI developers. Thomson Reuters was victorious against an AI-based legal platform, Ross Intelligence, for harvesting its data. It’s a drop in the water bucket however, because Trump’s Artificial Intelligence Action Plan sought input from Big Tech. Open AI and Google asked to be exempt from copyright in their big data sets. A group of authors are suing Meta and a copyright law professor gaggle filed an amicus brief on their behalf. The professors poke holes in Meta’s fair use claim.
Big Tech is powerful and they’ve done this for years:
"Tech companies have a history of taking advantage of legacy news organizations that are desperate for revenue and are making deals with short-term cash infusions but little long-term benefit. I fear AI companies will act as vampires, draining news organizations of their valuable content to train their new AI models and then ride off into the sunset with their multi-billion dollar valuations while the news organizations continue to teeter on the brink of bankruptcy. It wouldn’t be the first time tech companies out-maneuvered (online advertising) or lied to news organizations.”
Unfortunately creative types are probably screwed. What’s funny is that Carson is a John S. Knight Journalism Fellow at Stanford. It’s the same school in which the president manipulated content to advance his career. How many of these deep suckers are graduates of this esteemed institution? Who teaches copyright basics? Maybe an AI system?
Whitney Grace, September 11, 2025
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