Good point about it coming from a source. But looking at that, I think that that blog post was had a similarly clickbait headline, though more detailed (“Anthropic faces potential business-ending liability in statutory damages after Judge Alsup certifies class action by Bartz”).
The analysis in question also looks very rough to me. Like a quick sketch / blog post.
I’d guess that if you’d have most readers here estimate what the chances seem that this will actually force the company to close down or similar, after some investigation, it would be fairly minimal.
I found his page on the actual Santa clara law website, and it specifically mentioned that he founded the chatgpt blog in question. So it looks like he is legitimately a qualified law professor and from his profile it looks like he does specialise in IP law stuff.
Good point about it coming from a source. But looking at that, I think that that blog post was had a similarly clickbait headline, though more detailed (“Anthropic faces potential business-ending liability in statutory damages after Judge Alsup certifies class action by Bartz”).
The analysis in question also looks very rough to me. Like a quick sketch / blog post.
I’d guess that if you’d have most readers here estimate what the chances seem that this will actually force the company to close down or similar, after some investigation, it would be fairly minimal.
This got me to investigate Ed Lee a bit. Seems like a sort of weird situation.
The corresponding website in question’s about page doesn’t mention him.
Seems like he has another very similar site, https://bitcoiniseatingtheworld.com/, for reference, also with no about section
Here seems to be his Twitter page, where he advertises his new NFT book.
I found his page on the actual Santa clara law website, and it specifically mentioned that he founded the chatgpt blog in question. So it looks like he is legitimately a qualified law professor and from his profile it looks like he does specialise in IP law stuff.
On the other hand, the blog has posts with questionable methodology like asking chatgpt for probabilities of lawsuit outcomes.
I would like to hear from other IP law specialists.