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Joined 3 months ago
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Cake day: May 4th, 2025

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  • We are now at the age with the kids and been burned enough by companies like Nintendo to never again buy into systems that have closed ecosystems. If there are carts then we pick that over digital, and we only do digital if we can back it up.

    I have pirated copies of all the games i have bought over my life because it’s honestly bullshit that there are all these issues around software rights. If I am not asking the publishers to do more work then take my money and let m be able to pay the game I paid for.








  • ferrule@sh.itjust.workstoTechnology@lemmy.world*Permanently Deleted*
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    2 months ago

    That sounds like a setup to only go after those you can make money from and not actually protecting IP.

    By definition if your song is a hit it is heard by everyone. How do we show my new song is a direct consequence of hearing X song while your new song isn’t due to you hearing X song?

    I can see an easy lawsuit by putting out a song and then claiming that anyone who heard it “learned” how to play their new album this way. The fact AI can output something that sounds different than any individual song it learned from means we can claim nearly all works derivative.


  • ferrule@sh.itjust.workstoTechnology@lemmy.world*Permanently Deleted*
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    2 months ago

    So then anyone who uses a computer to make music would be in violation?

    Or is it some amount of computer generated content? How many notes? If its not a sample of a song, how does one know how much of those notes are attributed to which artist being stolen from?

    What if I have someone else listen to a song and they generate a few bars of a song for me? Is it different that a computer listened and then generated output?

    To me it sounds like artists were open to some types of violations but not others. If an AI model listened to the radio most of these issues go away unless we are saying that humans who listen to music and write similar songs are OK but people who write music using computers who calculate the statistically most common song are breaking the law.


  • ferrule@sh.itjust.workstoTechnology@lemmy.world*Permanently Deleted*
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    2 months ago

    the slippery slope here is that you as an artist hear music on the radio, in movies and TV, commercials. All this hearing music is training your brain. If an AI company just plugged in an FM radio and learned from that music I’m sure that a lawsuit could start to make it that no one could listen to anyone’s music without being tainted.