As the tech platform prepares for a public offering, it says that most of its revenue is from advertising, but touts artificial intelligence as a growth area.
Ehhh, I’m not super persuaded by that argument tbh. I don’t think arbitrary data has any intrinsic value on its own the way copyright-able art does. I work in tech and I’m just not sure I want that can of worms opened.
Edit: I guess I should say, it’s not something I’ve dedicated a lot of thought too. I’m open to arguments to the contrary.
I don’t think arbitrary data has any intrinsic value on its own the way copyright-able art does.
If you make a thing, copyright is intrinsically attributed to it. That’s what copyright law states.
Registering for copyright is simply the requirement to claim damages beyond the direct losses.
If you write a comment on a website, you have copyright for that comment. However, the terms of the website state that you give them extensive rights to your comment. Obstensibly, this is so that the website can operate normally, however the rights they claim extend far beyond that.
Such extrenuous rights are granted with no consideration. You have already accessed the website, you have already started making a comment. The content of your comment, if valueable, does not yield you any form of consideration (pay). As such, the rights they claim are not warranted.
Now that the value of user comments has increased so grossly with AI, the website’s claim to rights should be even weaker. Reddit is being paid millions for the comments they hold - and, frankly, they are selling it cheap. This value rightfully belongs to the users that made the comments, not to the business that attempted to squirrel away a transaction in the fine print.
This is a good point. Of course in the past you could just overhear someone say something and use that info for free. Like turn it into a song lyric or whatever. Even acting directly on the info could make you money if you overheard a stock tip.
Now comments online are directly attributable to a particular person. These LLM programs are like someone listening and watching whatever you’re doing. Then claiming those are their ideas.
Overhearing something by accident is one thing. Actively recording someone’s conversation with the intent to profit from it is another. Although I think that most of the info they’ll get is nonsense, so whatever. But it’s still not really their creation. It’s the commenters’.
Of course in the past you could just overhear someone say something and use that info for free
But that’s the thing, either the information is in the public domain - in which case it is freely available and cannot be sold to anyone else - or the information is private. It can’t be both. They can’t say “you posted it on our platform, so it’s public and we don’t have to pay you” while simultaneously selling it to someone else.
If they’re selling it, then the author has a fair claim to it. Terms and conditions won’t hold water if no consideration has been given, and “free access to a website” does not meet that bar - especially when the access is granted regardless of whether you make the post.
You can take something from the public domain and sell it. There’s plenty of public domain books sold. It just means that everyone can access it and use it equally. You can record everything you overhear at the store and use it for writing a story or whatever.
Although what you say sounds true. These comments are written and signed, easily attributed to the owner. Every document like that in the past has been the property of the writer. Same thing with images. I don’t know how Reddit can claim any comments are legally theirs without “consideration” as you say.
I think that’s fair-ish. I still think that most companies are going to argue that access to their platform is predicated on access to your data, given that it would not exist without the platform. The argument that they have some stake is at least valid on the face, particularly as it is a voluntary agreement the user enters when they engage with a product.
Companies have made a tradition of arguing it is their god-given right to make profit. That does not fit with reality.
The core principles of contract law dictate how transactions occur. When you buy something, the price on the shelf is not an “offer”, but an “invitation to treat”; you make the offer when you approach the owner and say “I will pay this amount to buy this thing from you”. The price on the shelf is simply the seller saying “If you offer this amount, I will most likely accept” - but the seller retains the right to refuse any offer you make.
With a website, the offer is made by the website owner at the point of entry. The offer is: “you can enter our site, free of charge!!”, but then there are terms attached. The terms should only be a technicality, something like “don’t be a dick while you’re here, else you can be kicked out”. But, instead, they have put in a second transaction, one which is akin to saying “we can rummage through your wallet and copy anything we find, and we can then sell copies of all of that, and you agree to give us that for free. Also, anything you say inside will be recorded and copied and sold in a similar manner”.
This is patently bullshit. An offer is “you give us X, we give you Y” and then the terms and conditions provide the details and limitations of that core offer. If you compare it to insurance, an insurer is required to give you some sort of “key facts page”, wherein they detail the key points of what they’re offering you in exchange for your insurance premium (the money). There is a clear exchange. With websites and software, there is often no clear exchange beyond the use of the software being free.
And this is before you consider cunts like Microsoft, who have seen what Google and Facebook do, yet you still pay for Windows and Office 365 while they steal your data for no consideration!
It’s fucking deceptive, and intentionally so. It has built up from a time when user data had no tangible value - and yet, the companies that collected this data (eg Google and Facebook) somehow managed to use this data to become amongst the wealthiest businesses in the world.
They have done this through fraudulent and unlawful means. To this date, they have not been challenged on this method. Now, we have a situation where “everyone does it” - but that doesn’t make it legal, and furthermore even more people are the victim of this offense. Lawmakers are the victims. It’s simply that people haven’t yet realised that they’re the victim, and in particular they haven’t yet understood the value that is being taken.
Like I say, $50 per year, minimum. Likely far more, approaching or maybe even exceeding $1,000 per year. From everyone - and your data is more valuable if you’re more publically prominent. It’s fucking criminal and needs to be sorted out. You can’t build a car without paying for the nuts and bolts, and as such Facebook and Google have a huge debt to pay.
Every time you receive an SMS message to verify your identity or authorise a transaction, you are confirming your phone number to multiple people, thereby giving them a fresh piece of data to sell. This doesn’t make you more secure - if anything, it weakens your consumer rights, as you are explicitly authorising the transaction rather than having it processed as “cardholder not present” where the seller assumes default liability in case of fraud. Even banks are in on the game, these days, and they sell away your consumer rights while telling you it’s good for you.
Ehhh, I’m not super persuaded by that argument tbh. I don’t think arbitrary data has any intrinsic value on its own the way copyright-able art does. I work in tech and I’m just not sure I want that can of worms opened.
Edit: I guess I should say, it’s not something I’ve dedicated a lot of thought too. I’m open to arguments to the contrary.
If you make a thing, copyright is intrinsically attributed to it. That’s what copyright law states.
Registering for copyright is simply the requirement to claim damages beyond the direct losses.
If you write a comment on a website, you have copyright for that comment. However, the terms of the website state that you give them extensive rights to your comment. Obstensibly, this is so that the website can operate normally, however the rights they claim extend far beyond that.
Such extrenuous rights are granted with no consideration. You have already accessed the website, you have already started making a comment. The content of your comment, if valueable, does not yield you any form of consideration (pay). As such, the rights they claim are not warranted.
Now that the value of user comments has increased so grossly with AI, the website’s claim to rights should be even weaker. Reddit is being paid millions for the comments they hold - and, frankly, they are selling it cheap. This value rightfully belongs to the users that made the comments, not to the business that attempted to squirrel away a transaction in the fine print.
This is a good point. Of course in the past you could just overhear someone say something and use that info for free. Like turn it into a song lyric or whatever. Even acting directly on the info could make you money if you overheard a stock tip.
Now comments online are directly attributable to a particular person. These LLM programs are like someone listening and watching whatever you’re doing. Then claiming those are their ideas.
Overhearing something by accident is one thing. Actively recording someone’s conversation with the intent to profit from it is another. Although I think that most of the info they’ll get is nonsense, so whatever. But it’s still not really their creation. It’s the commenters’.
But that’s the thing, either the information is in the public domain - in which case it is freely available and cannot be sold to anyone else - or the information is private. It can’t be both. They can’t say “you posted it on our platform, so it’s public and we don’t have to pay you” while simultaneously selling it to someone else.
If they’re selling it, then the author has a fair claim to it. Terms and conditions won’t hold water if no consideration has been given, and “free access to a website” does not meet that bar - especially when the access is granted regardless of whether you make the post.
You can take something from the public domain and sell it. There’s plenty of public domain books sold. It just means that everyone can access it and use it equally. You can record everything you overhear at the store and use it for writing a story or whatever.
Although what you say sounds true. These comments are written and signed, easily attributed to the owner. Every document like that in the past has been the property of the writer. Same thing with images. I don’t know how Reddit can claim any comments are legally theirs without “consideration” as you say.
I think that’s fair-ish. I still think that most companies are going to argue that access to their platform is predicated on access to your data, given that it would not exist without the platform. The argument that they have some stake is at least valid on the face, particularly as it is a voluntary agreement the user enters when they engage with a product.
Companies have made a tradition of arguing it is their god-given right to make profit. That does not fit with reality.
The core principles of contract law dictate how transactions occur. When you buy something, the price on the shelf is not an “offer”, but an “invitation to treat”; you make the offer when you approach the owner and say “I will pay this amount to buy this thing from you”. The price on the shelf is simply the seller saying “If you offer this amount, I will most likely accept” - but the seller retains the right to refuse any offer you make.
With a website, the offer is made by the website owner at the point of entry. The offer is: “you can enter our site, free of charge!!”, but then there are terms attached. The terms should only be a technicality, something like “don’t be a dick while you’re here, else you can be kicked out”. But, instead, they have put in a second transaction, one which is akin to saying “we can rummage through your wallet and copy anything we find, and we can then sell copies of all of that, and you agree to give us that for free. Also, anything you say inside will be recorded and copied and sold in a similar manner”.
This is patently bullshit. An offer is “you give us X, we give you Y” and then the terms and conditions provide the details and limitations of that core offer. If you compare it to insurance, an insurer is required to give you some sort of “key facts page”, wherein they detail the key points of what they’re offering you in exchange for your insurance premium (the money). There is a clear exchange. With websites and software, there is often no clear exchange beyond the use of the software being free.
And this is before you consider cunts like Microsoft, who have seen what Google and Facebook do, yet you still pay for Windows and Office 365 while they steal your data for no consideration!
It’s fucking deceptive, and intentionally so. It has built up from a time when user data had no tangible value - and yet, the companies that collected this data (eg Google and Facebook) somehow managed to use this data to become amongst the wealthiest businesses in the world.
They have done this through fraudulent and unlawful means. To this date, they have not been challenged on this method. Now, we have a situation where “everyone does it” - but that doesn’t make it legal, and furthermore even more people are the victim of this offense. Lawmakers are the victims. It’s simply that people haven’t yet realised that they’re the victim, and in particular they haven’t yet understood the value that is being taken.
Like I say, $50 per year, minimum. Likely far more, approaching or maybe even exceeding $1,000 per year. From everyone - and your data is more valuable if you’re more publically prominent. It’s fucking criminal and needs to be sorted out. You can’t build a car without paying for the nuts and bolts, and as such Facebook and Google have a huge debt to pay.
Every time you receive an SMS message to verify your identity or authorise a transaction, you are confirming your phone number to multiple people, thereby giving them a fresh piece of data to sell. This doesn’t make you more secure - if anything, it weakens your consumer rights, as you are explicitly authorising the transaction rather than having it processed as “cardholder not present” where the seller assumes default liability in case of fraud. Even banks are in on the game, these days, and they sell away your consumer rights while telling you it’s good for you.