It’s what. A book, maybe book and a half per month? Like cool that it’s an option but it’s not really something makes a difference for me.
It’s what. A book, maybe book and a half per month? Like cool that it’s an option but it’s not really something makes a difference for me.
Well it’s the same as with any document, digital or physical, that shows ownership. Obviously it being NFT wouldn’t make it magically legit, same as with anything else.
But like I said I don’t really see a point of that kind database being blockchain/NFT based anyway.
Tying NFT token to a physical object like a painting and keeping a database of who owns what seems potentially interesting. But why would you need it to be NFT based either, I don’t know.
One question I have is that if two people use the same prompt, do they get the same result?
If they do, how could that result be copyrighted because I can just as well reproduce the prompt, making an original “copy”.
If they don’t produce the same result, well it’s not the human that’s really doing the “original” part there, which is what copyright aims to protect, right?
On the other hand if I write an original comic book story and use AI as a tool to create the pictures, that, in my opinion, could be worth copyright protection. But it’s the same as just original story, it’s not really the pictures that are protected.
(And let’s not forget that AIs are mostly just fed stolen works, that needs to be solved first and foremost.)
Could you describe a case example how that applies in practice?
Because yeah I understand that when we all have our own copy of the data someone can’t falsify all our independent copies but is data being tampered like that even the problem?
Maybe it’ll tell me Windows 11 Pro serial number when I get to the destination.
So it’s the same story for Android?