It is though. If you commit copyrighted code that was generated by an LLM, you do have to follow the license of that code. If you don’t, that’s copyright infringement.
Even if the code isn’t copyrighted code, then it’s public domain code that can’t be copyrighted:
The Linux Kernel is under a copyleft license - it isnt being copyrighted.
But the policy being discussed isn’t allowing the use of copyrighted code - they’re simply requiring any code submitted by AI be tagged as such so that the human using the agent is ultimately responsible for any infringing code, instead of allowing that code go undisclosed (and even ‘certified’ by the dev submitting it even if they didnt write or review it themselves)
Submissions are still subject to copyright law - the law just doesnt function the way you or OP are suggesting.
It is though. If you commit copyrighted code that was generated by an LLM, you do have to follow the license of that code. If you don’t, that’s copyright infringement.
Even if the code isn’t copyrighted code, then it’s public domain code that can’t be copyrighted:
https://sciactive.com/human-contribution-policy/#More-Information
The Linux Kernel is under a copyleft license - it isnt being copyrighted.
But the policy being discussed isn’t allowing the use of copyrighted code - they’re simply requiring any code submitted by AI be tagged as such so that the human using the agent is ultimately responsible for any infringing code, instead of allowing that code go undisclosed (and even ‘certified’ by the dev submitting it even if they didnt write or review it themselves)
Submissions are still subject to copyright law - the law just doesnt function the way you or OP are suggesting.