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I’m quite familiar. It legally works, if you can prove that your data actually made it into the training set, you might be able to successfully sue them. That’s extremely unlikely though. If you can’t litigate a law, then it essentially doesn’t exist.

And what makes you think that can’t be done? You make it sound like because (you believe) it’s so hard to do you should have just not even bother trying, that seems really defeatist.

And like I said multiple times now, it’s a simple quick copy and paste, a ‘low-hanging fruit’ way of licensing/protecting a comment. If it works, great it works.

Besides, the best way to opt-out of AI training is to enable site-wide flags, which mark the content therein as off limits.

I have no control over the Lemmy servers, I only have control over my own comments that I post.

Also, the two options are not mutually exclusive.

because it’s an industry sanctioned way to accomplish what you want.

Again, both you and I know the history of the robots.txt file and how often and how well it’s honored, especially these days with the new frontier of AI modeling.

It would be best to do both, just to make sure you have coverage, so that if the robots.txt is not honored, at least the comment itself is still licensed.

Anti Commercial-AI license (CC BY-NC-SA 4.0)

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