So wait, if my start up does a human written "Hello World" and the rest is piled on AI slop it can't be stripped of copyright? Or is "Hello World" too generic to hold a copyright at all?
Granted, as you said this all has to be defined and tested in court, I'm just trying to understand where the line as you see it is.
Well, in the same way that farting with the windows open is going to increase your cars range. Yes there is an effect, but is anyone really going to notice?
My latest conspiracy theory is that is why so much money is being dumped into AI. They want to make AI video so convincing that when the real videos come out, everyone can claim it's AI.
I think the first one may be comparable, but for subsequent languages I think programming is much easier.
Granted, I only know one language that works with people, and have worked in dozens of programming languages over the years.