• Home
  • Domains
  • Internet & Tech
  • Security & Privacy
  • Google & Search
  • Editorial Praise
  • Contact

Strategic Revenue - Domain and Internet News

Proven Strategy. Measured Results. Internet news authored by John Colascione

Register Domain Names

  • Isn’t Print Dead?
  • Killer Acquisition
  • New gTLD Death
  • Online Censorship
  • Gullible Domainers
  • You’re A Loser
You are here: Home / Internet & Tech / If Humans Can Learn From Content, Why Can’t Artificial Intelligence Systems?

If Humans Can Learn From Content, Why Can’t Artificial Intelligence Systems?

March 23, 2026 By John Colascione Leave a Comment

*** Here Is A List Of Some Of The Best Domain Name Resources Available ***






Artificial Intelligence Systems
If something is legal and acceptable at a small scale, it should not become inherently illegal simply because it is done more efficiently. File photo: vanitjan, licensed.

PALM BEACH, FL – In the ongoing debate over artificial intelligence and copyright law, one argument continues to surface – and it deserves far more serious consideration than it’s currently getting. If a human being can legally read content, learn from it, and use that knowledge to inform their own speech, writing, and ideas… why shouldn’t a machine be allowed to do the same?

At its core, this is not a technological question. It’s a logical one.

Content Exists to Be Consumed

Content is created with a purpose – to be read, understood, and absorbed. Every article, book, research paper, blog post, and opinion piece is published with the expectation that someone will:

  • Read it
  • Process it
  • Learn from it
  • Apply that knowledge elsewhere

That is the entire point of publishing. To now argue that this same process is acceptable for humans, but not for machines, introduces a contradiction that is difficult to defend.

Learning Is Not Copying

A human being can read 1,000 articles on a subject and then:

  • Write a new article
  • Speak about the topic
  • Teach others
  • Form opinions influenced by what they’ve read

At no point do we consider that to be copyright infringement. Why? Because learning is not copying. It is transformation. Artificial intelligence, when functioning properly, is doing the same thing:

  • Identifying patterns
  • Understanding relationships between ideas
  • Generating new outputs based on learned information

It is not “reading and storing” content in the way critics often suggest. It is learning from it.

The Scale Argument Falls Short

One of the most common counterarguments is scale. “Yes, humans learn – but AI learns at massive scale.” That may be true. But scale alone does not change the nature of the activity. A human who reads 10 books is learning. A human who reads 10,000 books is still learning. The difference is quantity, not principle.

If something is legal and acceptable at a small scale, it does not become inherently illegal simply because it is done more efficiently. Otherwise, we would need to rethink nearly every technological advancement ever made.

The Real Issue: Output, Not Input

Where the debate becomes more legitimate is not in the act of learning – but in the results.

If an AI system:

  • Reproduces content verbatim
  • Generates outputs that are substantially similar to original works
  • Replaces the need for the original content in the marketplace

Then there is a meaningful discussion to be had. But that is an issue of output behavior – not the learning process itself. We should not confuse the two.

A Dangerous Precedent

Restricting AI from learning from legally available content raises a broader concern. If we begin to say: “This content may be read, but not learned from by certain entities” we are no longer talking about copyright protection. We are talking about controlling how knowledge itself can be used.

That is a dangerous line to cross.

The principle should be simple: If content is legally accessible, it should be legally learnable. Humans do it every day. Students do it. Professionals do it. Entire industries are built on it. Artificial intelligence is not inventing a new behavior – it is replicating an existing one.

The fact that it does so faster, at scale, and with greater efficiency does not change the fundamental nature of the act. It only challenges our comfort with it. And discomfort should not be the basis for rewriting the rules of knowledge itself.

John Colascione 2024
John Colascione

About The Author: John Colascione is Chief Executive Officer of SEARCHEN NETWORKS®. He specializes in Website Monetization, is a Google AdWords Certified Professional, authored a how-to book called ”Mastering Your Website‘, and is a key player in several online businesses.

Filed Under: Internet & Tech Tagged With: Absorption, Acceptable Use, Access, Accessibility, Application, Argument, Articles, Artificial Intelligence, Blog, Blog Content, Books, Consumption, Content, Content Generation, Content Restriction, Contradiction, Copying, Copyright Law, Copyright Protection, Critics, Data Scale, Debate, Economic Impact, Efficiency, Existing Systems, Fundamental Nature, Human, Human Learning, Ideas, Industries, Influence, Information, Information Use, Input, Knowledge, Knowledge Control, Learning, Legal, Legal Boundaries, Legal Debate, Legal Discussion, Logical Question, Machine, Machine Learning, Market Impact, Market Replacement, Marketplace, Opinion, Original Works, Output, Output Behavior, Pattern Recognition, Patterns, Principle, Process, Professionals, Publishing, Quantity, Reading, Relationships, Replication, Research, Results, Scale, Speech, Speed, Students, Subject Matter, Substantial Similarity, System Behavior, Technological Advancement, Technological Change, Technology, Transformation, Understanding, Verbatim Copying, Writing

*** Here Is A List Of Some Of The Best Domain Name Resources Available ***






Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Search This Site

by: John Colascione

John Colascione

Long Island Guide - The Guide to Long Island New York

John Colascione is Chief Executive of SEARCHEN NETWORKS® He specializes in Website Monetization, authored a book called Mastering Your Website, and is a key player in several Internet businesses.

Follow Me

John Colascione Twitter

The First Fiction Horror Story Based Entirely On An Internet Domain Name

Murder.net - Countdown to The Next Nightmare

USED CARS ENTERPRISE

auto buyers market
Auto Buyers Market – Shop Used Cars by Participating Dealers at autobuyersmarket.com

In The News

  • DNJournal: New Book From Veteran Domainer
  • From Brandable to Exact-Match Geo Domain
  • InnovateLI: Two Deals, One Very Interesting Digital
  • Internet Commerce Association: John Colascione
  • NamesCon: Featured Attendee: John Colascione
  • Long Island Media Inc, SmartCEO, Future 50
  • Speakers, Name Summit, John Colascione
  • Speakers, Real Estate Summit, John Colascione
  • 24 Leading Domain Experts Analyze 2017

Popular Stories

New gTLD? Not So Fast; History Suggests New ‘Right of the Dots’ Could = Total Failure

Could Domain Investing Industry End with Legal Provision for Domain “Hoarding”

Websites and Domain Names to Become Insignificant within 20 Years or Less

Does the Domain Industry Suffer From Own Versions of Trumpted “Fake News” Stories?

List of 300+ Cryptocurrency Domain Name Sales and Sale Prices [All Time] (NameBio)

Quotes to Follow

quote icon The domain name is equivalent to Gold. It is the only packaged item which is globally tax-free, portable, with value that is universal across different cultures. quote icon – Frank Schilling

quote icon Domains have and will continue to go up in value faster than any other commodity ever known to man. quote icon – Rick Schwartz

quote icon  Google knows you, your friends, your likes, what entertains you, where you are in the world at any given time. Google will soon predict your next action, your next thought, based on a collaboration of thoughts past. quote icon – John Colascione

Like These Headlines?

Enter your email address:

Delivered by FeedBurner

T.L.D. Brokerage

Domain Brokers

When a $12 Million Domain Story Isn’t the Whole Story: Revisiting the Icon.com Deal

WEST PALM BEACH, FL - When the domain Icon.com was reported to have sold for $12 million, it quickly became one of the most talked-about transactions in the domain industry. The deal was widely … [Read More...]

Legacy Newspapers Are Pricing Themselves Out of the Conversation With Paywalls

WEST PALM BEACH, FL - For more than a decade, paywalls have been positioned as the financial lifeline of legacy journalism; a necessary barrier designed to preserve revenue as print advertising … [Read More...]

Verification Code Scams: Never Share an OTP You Didn’t Initiate or Request

WEST PALM BEACH, FL - One-time verification codes - often sent via text message, email, or authentication apps - are designed to protect your accounts. These codes act as a second layer of security, … [Read More...]

Domaining blog recommended by Domaining.com

Copyright © 2010-2025 StrategicRevenue.com - Property of Internet Marketing Services Inc.   FeedBurner: RSS
By using this site you agree to our Terms of Service and Privacy Policy. If you do not agree, please exit the service.