this post was submitted on 02 Mar 2026
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That seems like an unacceptable loophole. I shouldn't be able to create derivative media and have it be legal and public domain. The unlicensed training itself is a rights violation, and and media produced from it should equally be a violation.
That is a different conversation. If we assume a legally trained AI strictly on data it was allowed to train on, they are saying the AI cannot hold copyright.
I also don't see a loophole here, since it was denied anyway.
Well, there's the rub - proving that AI-generated works are "derivative works" (in the legal sense).
This court case had nothing to do with that. I'm aware of a few cases that have established the opposite, that AI models and their products are not derivative works. Do you know of any that have established that they are?
There are cases where it's been ruled fair use.