A new investigation by The Atlantic is shedding light on a huge problem that authors in today’s day and age are facing, thanks to AI.
So much original content is not only getting scraped online by bots, it’s also getting published on public libraries, leading to absolute fury. Millions of books and academic papers were taken without consent.
The recent fury has to do with Facebook’s parent firm Meta, which might have accessed millions of materials to train its AI system Llama. This is why groups of authors located in places like the UK are standing their ground and protesting for their rights. They want their governments to intervene. We’re already seeing Meta, which owns Instagram, WhatsApp, and Facebook, defend a legal case brought on by top authors for the same reason.
The systems are huge, and they keep getting fed with huge amounts of data and trained to spot different patterns inside. This data is then used to produce passages of text by guessing the next term in that sequence.
Despite all of these systems getting dubbed intelligent, we see critics each day express dismay about how LLMs don’t think out of the box. They’re zero in terms of comprehension and can present all sorts of errors like it’s reality.
Most tech giants kept on arguing about how they need to produce more information to transform these systems into something reliable. At the same time, the media industry that features artists and authors also wants these tech giants to pay them for using their material.
A spokesperson at Meta shared how it rolled out transformational GenAI that powers huge innovation, creativity, and productivity for people working inside firms. They claim that fair use copyrights are crucial in curbing the issue, and that Meta wants to create AI that helps the masses.
Other than stealing ideas, issues about accuracy exist, and AI systems are super power hungry today. They’re creating more environmental fears as people worry it might replace them in the workplace someday soon.
Meta strongly feels open source models such as Llama better human productivity and can enhance quality of life, but this comes at the cost of human creativity. Artists feel they’re already undervalued, and now AI is taking away whatever little they have.
This is why so many writers are calling upon the government to make a difference, as that’s they’re only hope. They are helpless right now, and competing against the likes of Meta is never going to be easy for anyone.
After scraping the material, authors get zero compensation or even a shoutout of recognition when it’s used. This is what they are arguing about. Writers are calling for transparency as that’s something they feel is the least they deserve. After all, taking books produced by someone else and then using that to make revenue without taking consent is a little harsh, don’t you think?
Image: DIW-Aigen
Read next:
• AI-Fueled Side Hustles Are Booming: How Entrepreneurs Are Building Businesses in Record Time
• Gemini, ChatGPT, DeepSeek: The Biggest AI Data Collectors Revealed
So much original content is not only getting scraped online by bots, it’s also getting published on public libraries, leading to absolute fury. Millions of books and academic papers were taken without consent.
The recent fury has to do with Facebook’s parent firm Meta, which might have accessed millions of materials to train its AI system Llama. This is why groups of authors located in places like the UK are standing their ground and protesting for their rights. They want their governments to intervene. We’re already seeing Meta, which owns Instagram, WhatsApp, and Facebook, defend a legal case brought on by top authors for the same reason.
The systems are huge, and they keep getting fed with huge amounts of data and trained to spot different patterns inside. This data is then used to produce passages of text by guessing the next term in that sequence.
Despite all of these systems getting dubbed intelligent, we see critics each day express dismay about how LLMs don’t think out of the box. They’re zero in terms of comprehension and can present all sorts of errors like it’s reality.
Most tech giants kept on arguing about how they need to produce more information to transform these systems into something reliable. At the same time, the media industry that features artists and authors also wants these tech giants to pay them for using their material.
A spokesperson at Meta shared how it rolled out transformational GenAI that powers huge innovation, creativity, and productivity for people working inside firms. They claim that fair use copyrights are crucial in curbing the issue, and that Meta wants to create AI that helps the masses.
Other than stealing ideas, issues about accuracy exist, and AI systems are super power hungry today. They’re creating more environmental fears as people worry it might replace them in the workplace someday soon.
Meta strongly feels open source models such as Llama better human productivity and can enhance quality of life, but this comes at the cost of human creativity. Artists feel they’re already undervalued, and now AI is taking away whatever little they have.
This is why so many writers are calling upon the government to make a difference, as that’s they’re only hope. They are helpless right now, and competing against the likes of Meta is never going to be easy for anyone.
After scraping the material, authors get zero compensation or even a shoutout of recognition when it’s used. This is what they are arguing about. Writers are calling for transparency as that’s something they feel is the least they deserve. After all, taking books produced by someone else and then using that to make revenue without taking consent is a little harsh, don’t you think?
Image: DIW-Aigen
Read next:
• AI-Fueled Side Hustles Are Booming: How Entrepreneurs Are Building Businesses in Record Time
• Gemini, ChatGPT, DeepSeek: The Biggest AI Data Collectors Revealed