What's 'good' people? Imho there are none, there are just people with all the good
and bad they do. There are monsters, but very few saints, and none are here on this forum.
As for unethical or immoral behaviour, that's the same thing people have said about different sexuality, religion, politics and racial issues. Most xyz-ists do not consider themselves as bad or evil people, just as good ethical and moral people that speak out against what they perceive as unethical or immoral behaviour...
Just because you believe abc about generative AI and LLMs and I believe xyz, does not mean either of us is actually right... That you hear your opinion echoed in your bubble, does not make you more right, nor does it mean that my bubbles are right either. We have opinions, we all have them, just like we also have other things in common.
As for respecting others. Does that behaviour hurt someone directly? No. Indirectly, maybe. But maybe so does a butterfly's flapping wings on the other side of the the world... Generative AI/LLM and piracy do not take away anything, like actual stealing something does. If you take your car to another shop where the people do a better/faster job then your current car shop, some could consider that taking a job from people (your old car shop). Depending on the part of the world you live in we have laws and protections in place that protect older people's jobs, so they can't be easily replaced by younger cheaper people. In many parts of the 'civilized' world those protections are lacking...
In the last ~6 years (Github Copilot june 2021 in technical preview) I've not worked with LLM professionally, I have certain professional views on the use of LLM, mostly that a client's legal/security departments should first sign off on a specific solution (vendor) before I would even use it. I also think that many professional implementations of LLM have not been thought out very well, just as with most other new technologies that the consumer market has (almost) no use for. In a similar way we the 'cloud' movement many years ago, in a similar vine in the IT space we had things like Virtual Machines, Remote Desktops, Laptops, Terminals, mainframes, etc. Everytime there was a technology shift, people lost their jobs, most were able to adapt though to new technologies. When I started in IT 25-30 years ago, many things have changed. I view generative AI and LLM the same way, certain jobs will be gone, new ones will appear and most will make the transition from one to the other.
New technology shows up, law makers lag behind, laws change, while still not fully understanding how the technology works. As an example: How computers work with memory, storage, networking, etc. is not compatible with how copyright laws are written. And initially there was much confusion, but they didn't want to give up on their new convenient invention, what changed was how it was interpreted by the folks enforcing laws. And I see the same happening with generative AI and LLM. I suspect that the hype will die down, it will become less intrusive (compared to now) and people will start accepting it as part of their daily lives.
Let me give the example of the 80s anti-nuclear movement, against both weapons and energy production. Today, we still have them, just much a lot less (imho due to the end of the cold war in 89'-91'). We're now starting to produce more nuclear weapons again due to global issues. And we still have nuclear power. Most folks protesting then are either dead or don't understand that the powergrid doesn't care where the power comes from, no matter what you energy contract says your power comes from. My point: People move on, the world changes, other things become more important, and due to ignorance people will accept things they previously fought against... And the next generation doesn't know any better and embraces the future as so many generations before them have.