No Consent, No Credit, No Pay
When Sarah Andersen, Kelly McKernan, and Karla Ortiz filed their copyright infringement lawsuit against Stability AI and Midjourney in January 2023, they raised a question that now defines one of t...

Source: DEV Community
When Sarah Andersen, Kelly McKernan, and Karla Ortiz filed their copyright infringement lawsuit against Stability AI and Midjourney in January 2023, they raised a question that now defines one of the most contentious debates in technology: can AI image generation's creative potential be reconciled with artists' rights and market sustainability? More than two years later, that question remains largely unanswered, but the outlines of potential solutions are beginning to emerge through experimental licensing frameworks, technical standards, and a rapidly shifting platform landscape. The scale of what's at stake is difficult to overstate. Stability AI's models were trained on LAION-5B, a dataset containing 5.85 billion images scraped from the internet. Most of those images were created by human artists who never consented to their work being used as training data, never received attribution, and certainly never saw compensation. At a U.S. Senate hearing, Karla Ortiz testified with stark cl