The player at https://streamsafe.cc now carries the respective track's download URL
as an invisible element. To make it visible
in OBS, use custom CSS such as e.g.:
div#downloadurl { display: inline-block; }

The player at https://streamsafe.cc now carries the respective track's download URL
as an invisible element. To make it visible
in OBS, use custom CSS such as e.g.:
div#downloadurl { display: inline-block; }
Is digital piracy ethically justifiable?
Yes, let’s “Make it Fair” – by recognising that #copyright has failed to reward creators properly - https://walledculture.org/yes-lets-make-it-fair-by-recognising-that-copyright-has-failed-to-reward-creators-properly/ but they never will, and the great lie continues #ai
for whatever it's worth, please ask the UK parliament to prevent copyrighting for AI-produced art & imagery.
#AI #AIArt #petition #UK #copyright
https://petition.parliament.uk/petitions/713888
Petition to stop the theft of Irish writers' work by Meta https://my.uplift.ie/petitions/protest-meta-s-theft-of-irish-writing @bookstodon #boostodon #writing #writer #Meta #AI #copyright
Sam Altman's statement about creating Ghibli-style images is the biggest "F-You" he could give an artist. Not only is he actively violating Ghibli-Studio's copyright, but he is also encouraging others to do the same. The cherry on top is his complaint about his melting GPUs.
Art takes time and skill. Artists should be paid for both.
Stealing someone's lifework with a glorified copier doesn't make you a visionary. At best, it means you are an A-hole; at worst, a criminal A-hole.
#AI #copyright
It becomes ever more obvious to me that music #copyright is only benefiting some big tech capitalists and hurts everyone else. I would be so happy to just buy this musician a coffee, which would be many time more more than what he gets when I buy it from #Amazon.
@HeavenlyPossum You get similar takes against the critics of #copyright. "Ah, so you want children to starve just because their parents are writers!!"
From: blenderdumbass . org
A large majority of people confuse privacy with data protection. And lately I'm noticing an uproar of ideologies that claim to be pro-freedom in one way or another, but which threaten freedom as a whole. I think there is a certain copyright mentality to them. Certain misunderstanding of ownership which makes fighting for freed...
Read or listen: https://blenderdumbass.org/articles/the_copyright_mentality
@Catawu @briankrebs I’m not really interested in their frame of reference or what they think about the people impacted. That’s not because I don’t care, but because I think it's irrelevant to the deeper underlying issues.
I’m actually more interested to what extent this situation may violate #HIPAA and other #patientprivacy laws. Part of the functional challenge in what is currently going on at the federal level is that many privacy and #healthcare safeguards such as HIPAA are a complex mixture of laws passed by Congress and regulations defined by the executive branch to implement those laws.
I am not a lawyer, but I do deal with #privacyregulations and #regulatorycompliance issues professionally. To the extent that the administration is arguing that they have constitutional authority to make changes to the implementations developed and overseen by the executive branch itself, the extent of what is being done seems unprecedented but may not be illegal per se. I am not qualified to make that determination, but I think it's the foundational question that needs to be asked.
On the other hand, the parts of HIPAA and other federally-enacted laws regarding #healthcare and privacy are in fact laws established within our country’s constitutional framework. The executive branch can’t simply wish clearly-established laws into the cornfield. Unfortunately, many laws leave a great deal of the implementation details—whether unintentionally or through deliberate delegation—to the executive branch, the states, or various regulatory agencies. In turn, many of those regulators also operate to one extent or another under the executive branch, and that further complicates the picture.
Many federal laws leave a great deal of wiggle room for interpretation to the executive and judicial branches whether not by design, but congressionally-enacted laws and protections provided by the Constitution itself cannot simply be ignored. While there's definitely a difference, separating a "law" from the "regulations" that implement that law isn't necessarily a simple exercise.
The real challenge is that our republic was designed as a Venn diagram of overlapping roles, responsibilities, and authority that were meant to operate in a state of carefully-balanced tension. The republic's framework has never been tested this broadly within my lifetime, if ever. Even though how our three branches of government should work is material covered in any decent highschool civics class, the complexity of statutory vs. regulatory authority requires legal and Constitutional scholarship that is more than the average citizen can bring to bear on the matter. I'd like to think I understand these issues better than most—and I certainly have my own personal and professional instincts about what's right and wrong—but I wouldn't dream of claiming to understand all the nuances involved.
Professionally, I am taking a deliberately apolitical approach to what is a very legitimate set of questions about constitutional authority. Likewise, my apolitical but professional experience tells me that there is entirely too much gray area around the constitutional and legal topics to determine with certainty what is legal as opposed to what is moral or ethical. In my professional experience, what is right and what is lawful aren't always the same.
Unless society as a whole is willing to revisit some of the underlying assumptions collectively made over the past several hundred years about the differences between legislative laws and the administrative regulations that implement them, this problem is unlikely to go away anytime soon. In fact, it is likely to spread to other areas with similar gray areas. As an argument by analogy, the current legal mess around #copyright and #LLM training may be similar in terms of being pure sophistry where the term "fair use" is clearly being used in an intellectually dishonest way, but apparently it's far enough into the gray to pass legal muster right now. Decades or centuries of legislative layering has led to a legal framework that never envisioned modern realities. Revisiting and revising centuries of legal accretion would require a strong moral compass, a great deal of political courage, and in-depth analysis by legal and constitutional scholars (among others) in order to address the very real institutional unraveling we're observing.
Sadly, in a society that frequently classifies expertise as “elitism" such a brutally honest conversation is unlikely to happen soon. A broad reconsideration of how our republic was designed to function and a hard look at how it actually functions would require high levels of both personal and political courage. It's even less likely to be rapidly prioritized without sufficiently clear political self-interest from a majority of those with the remaining authority to materially affect the outcome.
What I’ve said may strike some as political opinion rather than strictly analytical observation. However, my statements are deliberately based on well-established sociological and psychological norms rather than current politics. I feel confident in asserting that the likelihood of Congress or the Supreme Court—much less the general public—addressing these things effectively in the near term is essentially zero. For any elected or appointed official acting alone, the risk of asserting constitutional prerogatives vastly exceeds both the collective will of their respective institutions and the already-ceded institutional powers required to do so effectively.
Baroness Kidron ‘does not believe that big players should ride roughshod over the creative industry to make the UK attractive to #AI companies, pointing out that some smaller UK companies pay for #copyright and “observe the laws of the land. We’ve got IP, a lot of big brands with very, very, very long histories. Why would we have a policy that uniquely benefits a handful of players outside the UK?”’
https://on.ft.com/4j5hEyb
I just drafted a decision-making flowchart
in case of automated claims on Youtube, Twitch
and the likes against #CreativeCommons music
. Like some weird #copyright
activist.
@susankayequinn Here's another article by @brianmerchant : https://www.bloodinthemachine.com/p/openais-studio-ghibli-meme-factory
"AI giants are indeed eating away at the livelihoods and dignity of working artists, and this devouring, appropriating, and automation of the production of art, of culture, at a scale truly never seen before, should not be underestimated as a menace"
Latest title in Open Humanities Press's MEDIA : ART : WRITE : NOW series:
Masked Media: What It Means to Be Human in the Age of Artificial Creative Intelligence by Gary Hall
http://www.openhumanitiespress.org/books/titles/masked-media/
Open access
(= it can be downloaded for free)
If we want a socially and environmentally just future, do we need a radical new theory of change – or to radically change theory? It’s this question Gary Hall and his collaborators have been addressing for over 20 years with experimental projects such as OHP, Liquid and Living Books, and the Culture-Led Re-Commoning of Cities. Unsettling received ideas of the author and book, originality and copyright, real and artificial intelligence, these theorist-mediums test the ‘non-modernist-liberal’ modes of creating and sharing knowledge enabled by media technologies, from writing and print, through photography and video, to computers and GenAI.
Copyright questions loom as ChatGPT's Ghibli-style images go viral
https://www.japantimes.co.jp/business/2025/03/28/companies/chat-gpt-ghibli/ #openai #copyright #passingoff #AI #film #animation
Dua Lipa beats lawsuit claiming she copied the song Levitating from a 70s disco song
https://www.abc.net.au/news/2025-03-28/dua-lipa-law-suit-levitating-/105107390
#copyright #music #litigation
"A musical style, defined by plaintiffs as 'pop with a disco feel,' and a musical function, defined by plaintiffs to include 'entertainment and dancing'," cannot possibly be protectable," Justice Failla wrote.
To hold otherwise, she said, would "completely foreclose the further development of music in that genre or for that purpose."
Anthropic Wins First Round In Lawsuit From Music Publishers Over Song Lyrics https://www.hollywoodreporter.com/business/business-news/anthropic-wins-first-round-lawsuit-music-publishers-song-lyrics-1236173148/ #AI #music #copyright
Save these dates!
The World Intellectual Property Organisation (WIPO) will host a free virtual webinar on Intellectual Property and AI on April 23-24, 2025.
For more details and to register:
https://mailchi.mp/wipo/wipo-conversation-11-ai-ip-the-future-of-copyright-infrastructure-join-us
From: blenderdumbass . org
A large majority of people confuse privacy with data protection. And lately I'm noticing an uproar of ideologies that claim to be pro-freedom in one way or another, but which threaten freedom as a whole. I think there is a certain copyright mentality to them. Certain misunderstanding of ownership which makes fighting for freed...
Read or listen: https://blenderdumbass.org/articles/the_copyright_mentality