anon7631 said:
I'll be honest, when it comes to free art (as opposed to Fanbox etc.) I don't see why Danbooru honours takedown requests at all.
Because Danbooru doesn't want to get sued. Legally speaking, we are on immensely shaky ground, protected mostly because larger corporations don't really care about our existence. We don't *own* any of this stuff, it isn't ours to distribute and show off as we see fit.
It also serves as a shield from those that accuse the site of art theft, stating that "You are free to remove your stuff the moment you don't want it here." Makes most artists simply decide to go that route instead of trying to pursue long, expensive, and potentially fail-able legal recourse for the reposting of their art without their permission. Copyright law can and will fuck you in the ass if you try and be cute with it, and we have only really escaped its wrath by simply being irrelevant in the greater scheme of things. (Most places banning links to dan as sources also helps, as it keeps the name on the down low.)
The fact that others due it without being whacked(YET) is mostly irrelevant to whether we would survive a legal battle. "Other people steal stuff too" Isn't a defense, so its best to avoid being in the line of fire in the first place.
As far as the whole "They just make it easier to find art" part of it, the issue there is the showcasing is actively providing the product without the views that come with it. Many people don't follow the source to where it came from, just looking, thinking 'cool', or 'meh', and moving on to the next piece of art, thus essentially depriving artists of the exposure they want from their art through the medium they desired.
Fanbox advertising is also featured on pixiv pages, which we don't really provide. For some, the free stuff is there to try and get people to be willing to drop a sub to their paid works, which becomes more difficult when people aren't seeing the big flashy "CHECK OUT MY FANBOX!" links. Sure, there is the argument that not everyone would be clicking those links anyway, but that just makes it worse since they are already dealing with a smaller pool to begin with.
The AI's are currently dodging the big copyright hullaballoo because they are technology so new that there really aren't any laws that fit their existence yet. 100% AI Art can't actually be legally copyrighted due to its very nature of being completely out of human hands(Most copyright laws don't allow you to copyright things outside of human scope, to prevent people from trying to copyright a sunset or other shit like that.) but this is what I like to call a "Honeymoon period", because the moment people start trying to use AI art for anything other than just generating free art? Copyright law is absolutely going to start sprinting to catch up. Imagine generating a gacha character and then being told that everybody else can put it in their games as well, because it doesn't belong to you.