On May 27, 2025, at 7:06 PM, Frederick Virchanza Gotham via Std-Proposals <std-proposals@lists.isocpp.org> wrote:

On Mon, May 26, 2025 at 4:48 AM René Ferdinand Rivera Morell wrote:

I do not give you permission to use my copyrighted works to train an AI.
And I doubt that ISO would give you permission to use ISO/IEC copyrighted
works to train an AI. If you do, or have, gone down that road.. Remove my
copyrighted content from your AI data immediately.


I haven't read the small print on what you agreed to when you emailed
Nevin to get a document number, but I'll give consideration to it
before releasing version 1 of my program. I think you retain the
copyright of what you wrote, but obviously if you submit a paper,
other people have to be able to work with it. I can't just write a
paper and submit it and mandate that everyone has to be drinking
decaffeinated coffee when they read it, or that they can store it on
an USB stick but only if the USB stick was purchased on a night when
there was a full moon.

Well now you have one person saying that they do not give you permission to use their work.

For you to copy people’s work you need to have the right to do so, I’m not sure what the exact rules for ISO are, but I can guarantee they aren’t “papers are in the public domain” which means you need the permission of the copyright owners. I’m not sure if that’s the authors or ISO, but it sounds like you haven’t even tried to find out, and instead were planning on copying papers without the consent of the authors or the copyright owners (which may or may not be different[1]), and then claiming that your “AI” is something other than a copy of other people’s work. 

Even if we were to try to assume goodwill on your part, when someone said you did not have their consent to steal their work, you said “I don’t care, I’m going to do it anyway”. That you think that is a reasonable, or even remotely ethical, behavior is absurd. Step 1 of being in any community is demonstrating some amount of respect for others in the community, and you haven’t demonstrated even the slightest semblance of that.

Just to be clear, you also don’t have my consent to steal any of my work either.

—Oliver



[1] Per https://www.iso.org/copyright.html all ISO documentation is copyright protected, whether ISO has copyright ownership of a proposal, or if the author retains it (I’m unclear whether a proposal is considered an ISO publication), is moot: it’s covered by copyright either ISO or the authors, and so copying the work requires permission of the copyright owner.