You cannot keep a purely legally-enforced moat in the face of advancing technology.
In the USA the DMCA can make it illegal to even own and use tools meant to bypass even the weakest of protection.
This law has already been used to ruin lives.
"They might catch the individual but not us all" is nice and fine until it is your turn, so check your legislation.
IP law means nothing once tens of millions of people are openly violating it.
The software industry is about to learn this lesson too.
Uhm... yes? The cost of downloading pirated music is essentially zero. The only reason why people use services like Spotify is because it's extremely cheap while being a bit more convenient. But jack up the price and the masses will move to sail the sea again.
That is not necessarily true, depending on the level of enforcement and the availability of opportunities to steal.
> Same argument can be made for streaming, and yet Netflix is neither cheap nor struggling for subscribers.
Netflix is still pretty cheap for the convenience it provides. Again, jack up the price and see the masses move to torrent movies/shows again.
Yet.
A whole bunch of people I watch on youtube (politics, analysts, a weatherman) are already seeing AI impersonation videos, sometimes misrepresenting their positions and identities. This will grow.
So, you can't create art because that's extruded at scale in such a way that it's just turning on the tap to fill a specified need, and you can't be a person because that can also be extruded at scale pretty soon, either to co-opt whatever you do that's distinct, or to contradict whatever you're trying to say, as you.
As far as being a person able to exist and function through exchanging anything you are or anything you do for recompense, to survive, I'm not sure that's in the cards. Which seems weird for a technology in the guise of aiding people.