But what if, instead of AI writing that part, I went home and wrote that additional part myself, and gave it to my student for her to recite at the play? Is the author being screwed over somehow if I or my coworker did it? Yes, AI consumes these authors' works, but so do we. It's out there for anyone to consume, human or machine. I'm not trying to write a "gotcha" question here, I want to know what you think about this and understand it better. I don't know anything about legalities and nothing really about AI besides that it exists. Also, I don't know that it matters or not, but this play is being done strictly by students, for students. No money will be made, no admission charged. It's part of their curriculum as a public speaking exercise.
Honestly that part about going home and doing it on your own? Truly harmless. Only the most litigious, asshole authors on earth would get mad at you for that. Hell, if someone converted my books into a high school stage play I'd tell people about it myself on social media. The problem is when it goes broader than that - all of the major AI options, anything you feed into it becomes part of their "soup" other people can generate stuff from. It's taking protected work and putting into a massive machine owned by the worst people on earth, or using that machine owned by those people who ALREADY stole our work and giving it to your colleague (who, because the AI companies don't tell you this, innocently has no idea they're using stolen goods).
Think of it like: you have your class draw fan art of the Hunger Games. No big deal. Hell, Suzanne Collins would love it. Vs. you ask Ai to rewrite the Hunger Games to, I dunno, edit out a character you don't like. Or create a second sister for Katniss. And then that become part of that algorithmic soup that neither you nor Collins owns. By using AI you've invited that bigger, for-profit player into the equation.
Last year the writers guild polled members - if you could make X dollars by licensing, with your consent, your work to a program like OpenAI would you want to get paid for it? And 95% of respondents said no. Authors don't want their work in that machine, and all htey're asking is to have that desire respected.
(Mind you, we also have to be assholes about it - if you don't defend your IP when it's misused, eventually the courts view it as that you are not willing or interested in defending it - it's why you'll see up and coming artists or comics issue rules for legally creating fan art once they hit a certain point. You legally need to safeguard your work or it's considered negligence. But OpenAI, Meta, Google, and Anthropic all went out and grabbed everything they could and figured it was better to ask for forgiveness than permission. And that's why they're losing lawsuits.)
I's funny, just today news broke that Meta was torrenting pirated books
and their own staff knew it was unethical. If I sound grumpy and short-tempered, it's cos we get bad news about this every day. And truly we were all hoping generative AI would be like NFTs - sure, I hate NFTs but they weren't HURTING anyone. But AI morphed into something so much worse for creators.
I think you're getting lost here in the relative harm of a random teacher making a decision to do this for a school play, which I think most authors wouldn't find especially harmful, and the mechanism by which this particular alteration is being carried out.
This is a good one-sentence summary of it, yeah. To do it once in a classroom for education and fun, using your human brain? Like I said, I'd brag about it. (I actually had a class recreate one of my fight scenes using stage combat a few months back and I shared the video with my readers, it was fuckin' RAD.) But if they used AI to create a fight scene of my characters in a video format I'd have been devastated and, honestly, probably would've legally needed to send a C&D if they didn't take it down.