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  3. If you ask AI to rewrite the entirety of an open-source program, do you still need to abide by the original license?

If you ask AI to rewrite the entirety of an open-source program, do you still need to abide by the original license?

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  • hopeless@mas.toH hopeless@mas.to

    @kevinr @lcamtuf In retrospect... "actual answer", "of course", "prima facie" are all red flags you're reading a bunch of nonsense blather.

    kevinr@masto.free-dissociation.comK This user is from outside of this forum
    kevinr@masto.free-dissociation.comK This user is from outside of this forum
    kevinr@masto.free-dissociation.com
    wrote sidst redigeret af
    #17

    @hopeless @lcamtuf no, you're just reading an educated asshole who happens to be right

    hopeless@mas.toH 1 Reply Last reply
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    • arnebab@rollenspiel.socialA arnebab@rollenspiel.social

      @SnoopJ There’s the concept of clean room reimplementations (see the link by @bgalehouse😞 one group writes the spec -- possibly with access to the source.

      The second group has never seen the source and only gets the spec. This second group then writes the program according to the spec.

      You could simulate this if you had an AI that was provably not trained on the original source.

      ("provably not trained" most likely means re-training from scratch)

      @bgalehouse @kevinr @lcamtuf

      kevinr@masto.free-dissociation.comK This user is from outside of this forum
      kevinr@masto.free-dissociation.comK This user is from outside of this forum
      kevinr@masto.free-dissociation.com
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      #18

      @ArneBab @SnoopJ @bgalehouse @lcamtuf

      And the spec would need to carefully elide certain details which would get it classed as a derivative work itself—much harder for an LLM to do than a team of humans

      arnebab@rollenspiel.socialA 1 Reply Last reply
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      • kevinr@masto.free-dissociation.comK kevinr@masto.free-dissociation.com

        @lcamtuf actual answer: of course you do, it’s prima facie a derivative work, same as if you had rewritten the program by hand.

        groxx@hachyderm.ioG This user is from outside of this forum
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        #19

        @kevinr @lcamtuf yea, seems like at best it's treated like it was done by a human... and then it's just blatant plagiarism.

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        • kevinr@masto.free-dissociation.comK kevinr@masto.free-dissociation.com

          @lcamtuf actual answer: of course you do, it’s prima facie a derivative work, same as if you had rewritten the program by hand.

          kevinr@masto.free-dissociation.comK This user is from outside of this forum
          kevinr@masto.free-dissociation.comK This user is from outside of this forum
          kevinr@masto.free-dissociation.com
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          #20

          @lcamtuf There are a number of tools online which purport to strip the copyright from images by running them through an image model, and they're just as obviously bullshit

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          • kevinr@masto.free-dissociation.comK kevinr@masto.free-dissociation.com

            @ArneBab @SnoopJ @bgalehouse @lcamtuf

            And the spec would need to carefully elide certain details which would get it classed as a derivative work itself—much harder for an LLM to do than a team of humans

            arnebab@rollenspiel.socialA This user is from outside of this forum
            arnebab@rollenspiel.socialA This user is from outside of this forum
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            #21

            @kevinr and proving that the AI was not trained on the original source will be pretty hard, because FLOSS programs with compatible licenses can legally copy code from one project into the other.

            You’ll likely have to exclude all code from the project and all code that’s too similar from the training data. And then train an AI from scratch. Which would be extremely expensive.

            @SnoopJ @bgalehouse @lcamtuf

            arnebab@rollenspiel.socialA 1 Reply Last reply
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            • arnebab@rollenspiel.socialA arnebab@rollenspiel.social

              @kevinr and proving that the AI was not trained on the original source will be pretty hard, because FLOSS programs with compatible licenses can legally copy code from one project into the other.

              You’ll likely have to exclude all code from the project and all code that’s too similar from the training data. And then train an AI from scratch. Which would be extremely expensive.

              @SnoopJ @bgalehouse @lcamtuf

              arnebab@rollenspiel.socialA This user is from outside of this forum
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              #22

              @kevinr but I expect that someone will come in and say "my prompt includes 'forget all code from <project>', so the AI does not know it".

              … OK, I have to admit that I lost trust into the sanity of a part of humanity …

              @SnoopJ @bgalehouse @lcamtuf

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              • kevinr@masto.free-dissociation.comK kevinr@masto.free-dissociation.com

                @hopeless @lcamtuf no, you're just reading an educated asshole who happens to be right

                hopeless@mas.toH This user is from outside of this forum
                hopeless@mas.toH This user is from outside of this forum
                hopeless@mas.to
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                #23

                @kevinr @lcamtuf Well, from a reader's perspective, it reads like you are still trying to convince yourself you're right.

                This is usually a bad sign if you're trying to convince anyone else you're right.

                The problem is in what sense is it "derivative" if the original content is neither known or referenced? We are talking about copyright alone here and your choice of phrase "derivative work".

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                • lcamtuf@infosec.exchangeL lcamtuf@infosec.exchange

                  If you ask AI to rewrite the entirety of an open-source program, do you still need to abide by the original license? In philosophy, this problem is known as the Slop of Theseus

                  noortjevee@mstdn.socialN This user is from outside of this forum
                  noortjevee@mstdn.socialN This user is from outside of this forum
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                  #24

                  @lcamtuf shakes my fist at theseus

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                  • tbortels@infosec.exchangeT tbortels@infosec.exchange

                    @bgalehouse @lcamtuf @kevinr

                    Assuming you used the original source code to derive the detailed spec, then yes, that too is a derivative work.

                    The "viral" nature of that sort of license has bothered me for a long time. It's always been simultaneously overly far reaching and impossible to realistically enforce.

                    gisgeek@floss.socialG This user is from outside of this forum
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                    #25

                    @tbortels @bgalehouse @lcamtuf @kevinr Well, yes but no. The point about spec is the level of detailing taken from the original work. If you write an original novel about a wild, big monkey found in a jungle, brought to New York, who escapes and so on, the King Kong author cannot claim any rights to that, sorry. If it were different, many narratives and movies would not exist today. That is inspiration, not derivation. Of course it is fair declaring inspiration, but call it with the right name.

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                    • lcamtuf@infosec.exchangeL lcamtuf@infosec.exchange

                      If you ask AI to rewrite the entirety of an open-source program, do you still need to abide by the original license? In philosophy, this problem is known as the Slop of Theseus

                      T This user is from outside of this forum
                      T This user is from outside of this forum
                      tkissing@mastodon.social
                      wrote sidst redigeret af
                      #26

                      @lcamtuf OpenAI already gets all upset, if someone uses their AI to train a different AI. If the whole technocrap brotherhood wasn't built around hypocrisy, the slop factory owners should be on the side of "no, you can't do this".

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                      • victimofsimony@infosec.exchangeV victimofsimony@infosec.exchange

                        @lcamtuf

                        This case law exists in the U.S.

                        There are two cases (or arguably three if you include Sega v. SNK).

                        Here's what you really care about:
                        🅰️ Any author of code is judged based on their own use of the existing code, so reverse-engineering of code used to be based on an engineer writing down, line by line, in plain English, what to do. Then a second person sat down and made up code, line-by-line to accomplish that task. Things have changed but the idea that you can't literally harvest existing code is still a thing.
                        🅱️ You own the #AI made code but can't copyright it... so you can't profit from it in the same way.

                        fantasmitaasex@todon.euF This user is from outside of this forum
                        fantasmitaasex@todon.euF This user is from outside of this forum
                        fantasmitaasex@todon.eu
                        wrote sidst redigeret af
                        #27

                        @VictimOfSimony @lcamtuf
                        C The fucking source code was used to train the LLM

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                        • jonassmith@theforkiverse.comJ jonassmith@theforkiverse.com shared this topic
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