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The Guardian - UK
The Guardian - UK
Technology

Mining of authors’ work is nothing new – AI is just doing what creative humans do

Keira Knightley in Atonement.
Keira Knightley in the film of Atonement. ‘Ian McEwan was influenced by LP Hartley’s The Go-Between,’ writes Andrew Vincent. Photograph: AJ Pics/Alamy

Authors say they are angry that Meta has used their material to train its artificial intelligence (Authors call for UK government to hold Meta accountable for copyright infringement, 31 March). But hasn’t that been going on for thousands of years? Isn’t all human thought an iteration of what has gone before? Artists and scientists have been mining the work of others for generations; that’s how human thought evolves.

Ian McEwan was influenced by LP Hartley’s The Go-Between. George Orwell’s Nighteen Eighty-Four was inspired by Yevgeny Zamyatin’s We. Did Richard Osman invent the genre of cosy crime? The publishing industry as a whole is guilty of putting out bandwagon books, which ape the style, themes and tropes of a hit.

The chief executive of the Society of Authors, Anna Ganley, says writers are “up in arms”. Did she coin that phrase? Creativity has always “trained” on the work of others.
Andrew Vincent
Westmancote, Worcestershire

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