Every jurisdiction and country in the world that I know of has legalized theft in one way or another. Just one example is called eminent domain. It's nice to pretend that all theft is illegal worldwide. But that's simple not true.
Piracy? Sure, AI training? Except for the one mention previously, doesn't sound like they have been legally equated yet.
I'm not defending it. If you don't understand my concerns fine, but don't accuse me of supporting piracy.
So none of the lawsuits have stuck yet? And their is no guarantee any of them will so we don't know what the precedence will be do we? The free market might drive away all these free image generators used for RPG images. But it won't make the technology itself go away. It is being pursued successfully in many major industries, including medical, banking, and defense. That's where the money is, not RPGs.
Sorry, but it does. One court finding in the fourth district of the US only holds for that district. Even a ruling in SCOTUS would only apply in the US (and maybe that would influence other countries). But for this issue to be "settled", it needs to be settled in many courts all around the world. I don't know if that number is ten or one thousand. But it's certainly not one.
Generally no, I'm not ok with theft. But I recognize that there are forms of what you would call theft that are legal and normal. I already mentioned eminent domain. But there are many others as well. Usually justified by benefiting society at the price of the individual. And if you look at Asian cultures they often have a much more society over individual view than the US and western Europe does. Though most of us are probably US or European, this technology is world-wide. This issue will need to be resolved at an international manner.
And if those court rulings don't go the way you want, then what?
I agree that shunning AI products is fast and less costly to protect our creators. But it's a temporary solution. I don't see shunning AI products as a long term solution for current creators and certainly won't enable the next generation of creators.