It’s not bad faith argument. It’s an attempt to shake thinking that is profoundly stuck by taking that thinking to an absurd extreme. Until that’s done, quite a few people aren’t able to see past the assumptions they don’t know they making. And by quite a few people I mean everyone, at different times. A strong appreciation for the absurd will keep a person’s thinking much sharper.
>> They key difference between plagarism and building on someone's work is whether you say, "this based on code by linsey at github.com/socialnorms" or "here, let me write that for you."
> [i want to] shake thinking that is profoundly stuck [because they] aren’t able to see past the assumptions they don’t know they making
what is profoundly stuck, and what are the assumptions?
Copyright isn't some axiom, but to quote wikipedia: "Copyright laws allow products of creative human activities, such as literary and artistic production, to be preferentially exploited and thus incentivized."
It's a tool to incentivse human creative expression.
Thus it's entirely sensible to consider and treat the output from computers and humans differently.
Especially when you consider large differences between computers and humans, such as how trivial it is to create perfect duplicates of computer training.