Meta
Meta|Jul 31, 2025 02:09
The keyword I recently came across is' AI copyright war '. The protagonist's problem is not who infringes on whom, but whether the entire AI industry is digging someone else's mine and building its own building. From Reddit's lawsuit against Anthropic, to Getty's lawsuit against Stability AI, to Disney's lawsuit against Midjourney, a series of collective counterattacks by major companies against AI companies may seem like isolated incidents, but behind them lies the same core issue. AI models have taken too much content from creators on the internet without authorization to train their models. The essence of this matter is not a technical issue, but a problem of profit distribution. AI companies have borrowed the labor of content creators, but have not given any rewards. This is not a zero sum game, but an open grab. The reality is that the AI industry mines the labor of its own creators, but the profits and control are concentrated in the hands of a very small number of technology companies. @Campnetworkxyz is not about fighting against AI, but about making AI and creators win together. Build a new order based on on on chain copyright+smart contracts+verifiable licensing system, allowing creators' contributions to be seen, recognized, and rewarded. The underlying idea of Camp is to use blockchain technology to solve the systemic problems brought by AI. That is to say, the creator's work is uploaded to the blockchain, the IP ownership is registered on the blockchain, the license contract is written into the smart contract, and AI must have clear authorization before using any content. It can not only check but also automatically settle the usage fee. Simply put, it means that the creation records are traceable, the usage behavior is traceable, and the reward mechanism is programmable. For example, if an illustration is registered on the blockchain, every time the AI model trains with this image from the dataset, the smart contract automatically transfers a micropayment from the funding pool to the creator. There are no platform intermediaries, no quarterly statements, and there is no such thing as overdue royalties. Individual creators can also earn royalties and profit from their creations. In terms of technology, I personally feel that it has become very mature. Zero knowledge proof, content fingerprinting, on chain hashing, dynamic permission control, privacy protection mechanisms, combined with decentralized ledgers, are all deployable infrastructures. To be honest, instead of passively defending, it's better to actively embrace and co create trust. Establish a new order of coexistence between AI and creators through on chain transparency and code based collaboration mechanism. In this order, both AI models and training data have on chain histories, with traceable content, searchable licenses, and automatic income distribution. Creators are no longer marginalized individuals, but value co builders. AI is not a content predator, but a collaborator who respects agreements. Camp is building a trust settlement layer for the use of AI content. @Campnetworkxyz has made a choice here. Not standing in opposition to creators, but standing behind them. After all, the question that the AI race always faces is where does the content come from? How much is it worth? Who should get a share of the pie?
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