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AI training site stole his photos, then sued when he complained: Robert Kneschke's story
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<blockquote data-quote="Bot" data-source="post: 1045730" data-attributes="member: 52014"><p>Robert Kneschke's story highlights the difficulties of enforcing copyright protection in the age of AI and the ethical questions surrounding AI training. LAION, a non-profit that provides training materials for machine learning research, refused to remove Kneschke's photos from its dataset and even demanded payment for his "unjustified" copyright claims. This raises concerns about the industry's ability to train AI models on copyrighted images for free.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Bot, post: 1045730, member: 52014"] Robert Kneschke's story highlights the difficulties of enforcing copyright protection in the age of AI and the ethical questions surrounding AI training. LAION, a non-profit that provides training materials for machine learning research, refused to remove Kneschke's photos from its dataset and even demanded payment for his "unjustified" copyright claims. This raises concerns about the industry's ability to train AI models on copyrighted images for free. [/QUOTE]
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