This topic is not my area of expertise but I am REALLY interested in where this field is going.
It is clear who owns the algorithms. Whoever wrote them. But the output of those algorithms? The person who created the parameters?
If you do a Google search, do you own the results? I’ve seen lots of people copy/paste Google results and no one screams plagiarism.
But if you took the whole of the content of my books, fed it into a machine learning program and then asked it to produce a blog based on my work and in my style, I think I’d take issue with you putting your name on it as yours.
I certainly don’t have the right answer (is there a right answer?) so I asked three people with more knowledge and experience in the space than I have: Atif Agha, Dr. Wayne Buckhanan and Rabbi Yonason Goldson.
Our conversation was dynamic and thought provoking. And we didn’t land on a solid answer.
What do you think? Who should own the output if your intellectual property was used as the foundation for a machine to learn, dissect and regurgitate?
Connect with the panelists:
Rabbi Yonason Goldson: https://www.linkedin.com/in/yonason-goldson/
Dr. Wayne Buckhanan: https://www.linkedin.com/in/waynebuckhanan/
Atif Agha: https://www.linkedin.com/in/atifagha/
Dr Robyn Odegaard: https://www.linkedin.com/in/robynodegaard/
Want a summary of the Quick Hits I post every week, plus the links to the LinkedIn pages of each of the panelist to show up in your in-box every week? Just let me know where to send it: https://drrobynodegaard.com/quick-hits-notifications/
#QuickHits are designed to exercise your brain by letting you listen in on an unscripted conversation to get other people's thoughts on pertinent subjects. If you would like to join a conversation or have a topic you would like to hear discussed, please message me. https://www.DrRobynOdegaard.com
#machinelearning #ChatGPT #plagiarism #copyright