It really just reads like warmed over leftovers from the Napster/Limewire/Pirate Bay-era, just pure "It's not stealing because I really, really want <thing> and don't want to pay for it, and really they should be thankful I'm even listening to/watching it at all".
We all made fun of the
"You wouldn't download a car!" videos at the time but it doesn't change the fact that it was still, you know, stealing.
The core issue with IP violation is that it
isn't stealing.
If someone made an exact copy of your car in the middle of the night but it was still there in the morning when you went to drive it, you wouldn't call the police to report a stolen car.
It's an entirely seperate and newly written crime to violate IP.
Similarly, AI art doesn't really even violate
those IP laws, so anti-AI people are left only able to demand new legislation because what they're opposed to at its core isn't even illegal.
That does sound interesting. I tried to find out more about it but couldn't find anything on their site with a five minute search. Do you have a link?
Though as regards insiders, I mean, Boeing's guy is probably going to need a new job soon
Since you seem to be unaware, I'll just point this out:
Adobe's claim to have an AI Art generator that is 100% watertight under all existing and future law is completely true. They do.
This is because Adobe has legal rights to basically everything, since basically everyone uses Adobe products like Photoshop.
In other words, the implementing the demands of Anti-AI crowd means pretty much nothing except overwhelming corporate monopoly on art. Open source projects would be strangled and only Adobe and maybe a few other billion dollar companies would control all the AI art.
Actual artists would be just as affected by AI art as now, if not more so because I'm sure with unlimited money, Adobe could find a way to accelerate things in whatever the worst direction is.