The rationale obviously points to stack exchange blocking AI from training off their content on archive.org. They go on to demand adherence to “socially responsible” AI training which requires cash-flow between AI companies and the data sources they train from.
First, and most obviously, stack exchange does NOT own the forum content. It has been provided for FREE by the larger developer community, and that same community regularly makes use of the AI tools which will be inhibited by this policy change. Second, stack exchange is questioning the integrity of archive.org by hiding the data.
Developers are the real victims here, and the audacity of Stack Exchange to demand money for work they DIDN’T do, but continuing to NOT pay their forum contributors is peak irony.
Actually no, we agree to provide it under two licenses, one of which is CC-BY-SA. We don't give them ownership, we give them irrevocable usage rights.
> You agree that any and all content, including without limitation any and all text, graphics, logos, tools, photographs, images, illustrations, software or source code, audio and video, animations, and product feedback (collectively, “Content”) that you provide to the public Network (collectively, “Subscriber Content”), is perpetually and irrevocably licensed to Stack Overflow on a worldwide, royalty-free, non-exclusive basis pursuant to Creative Commons licensing terms (CC BY-SA 4.0), and you grant Stack Overflow the perpetual and irrevocable right and license to access, use, process, copy, distribute, export, display and to commercially exploit such Subscriber Content, even if such Subscriber Content has been contributed and subsequently removed by you as reasonably necessary to, for example (without limitation):
Yes, but does that mean that SO is obligated to share the data with AI companies?
I know that the CC-BY-SA [1] says
> No additional restrictions — You may not apply legal terms or technological measures that legally restrict others from doing anything the license permits.
It just means others will scrape and push into the Internet Archive (or publish torrents). They aren’t obligated, but they also have little control regardless of gating mechanisms.
They don't own the content according to the TOS, they get a license to use it (the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 license). They could still use it for AI training, but the model would have to be CC BY-SA 4.0 (not that AI companies care).
This definitely forbids the "I will not transfer it to others without permission from Stack Overflow" checkbox, as the CC BY-SA 4.0 license says "You may not apply legal terms or technological measures that legally restrict others from doing anything the license permits."
The Stack Exchange TOS ( https://stackoverflow.com/legal/terms-of-service/public ) doesn't assign ownership - posters retain copyright, SO gets a non-exclusive license to it, and everybody else gets it under various CC wiki terms.
Paraphrased: "Now that OpenAI is paying us for your freely contributed Creative Commons content, we share an interest in constructing their moat by making it harder for others to access both mechanically and legally"
Well, SO is now (possibly was?) owned[1] by the same group of companies[2] that failed to secure their own TLDs[3] for purely technical reasons, so, before nefarious intent, please also consider plain incompetence....
I wonder if archives downloaded by two different people have different checksums? That would mean they have hidden a paper town (fake entry/signature) somewhere. I would be surprised if that's not the case, or will be the case.
"Stack Overflow is no longer uploading the data dump to archive.org."
"We would really rather users do not upload the file to archive.org or similar data pile sites."
They have no way to stop people from doing that under the license. Only kind words. Since they've made it deliberately hard for people to train on, I'd be really surprised if people didn't put it on Archive.org and HuggingFace Datasets. So long as it's under the license, it should be fine, right?
I am not a lawyer.
What they said about access speed issues makes little sense to me, I torrented their dumps before just fine and was very happy to seed it.
First, and most obviously, stack exchange does NOT own the forum content. It has been provided for FREE by the larger developer community, and that same community regularly makes use of the AI tools which will be inhibited by this policy change. Second, stack exchange is questioning the integrity of archive.org by hiding the data.
Developers are the real victims here, and the audacity of Stack Exchange to demand money for work they DIDN’T do, but continuing to NOT pay their forum contributors is peak irony.