Thanks to visit codestin.com
Credit goes to programming.dev

  • LeFantome
    Codestin Search App
    Codestin Search App
    Codestin Search App
    21
    ·
    8 months ago

    Can Open Source defend against copyright claims for AI contributions?

    If I submit code to ReactOS that was trained on leaked Microsoft Windows code, what are the legal implications?

    • General_Effort@lemmy.world
      Codestin Search App
      Codestin Search App
      Codestin Search App
      1
      ·
      8 months ago

      If I submit code to ReactOS that was trained on leaked Microsoft Windows code, what are the legal implications?

      None. There is a good chance that leaked MS code found its way into training data, anyway.

      • LeFantome
        Codestin Search App
        Codestin Search App
        Codestin Search App
        1
        ·
        7 months ago

        I am not sure how you arrived at “none” from your second sentence. The second sentence is exactly my point.

        Alternatively then, can I just use the Microsoft source code and claim that I got it from AI? That seems to be your point here.

        • General_Effort@lemmy.world
          Codestin Search App
          Codestin Search App
          Codestin Search App
          1
          ·
          7 months ago

          No. If it’s a copy, then it falls under copyright regardless of how the copy is made. The question wasn’t about copying, though.

          Be aware that copyright only covers the creative elements; ie things that other people would do differently. It also doesn’t cover ideas, methods, and the like. It also doesn’t cover very short or obvious creations. So, copyright on code comes from UI design, comments, names, even the ordering of lines, functions, splitting the code into files, using shorthand or not, and so on. Snippets and even short functions are typically not copyrightable. If you have some short program that anyone would write that way, then that’s not copyrightable, beyond comments and maybe names.