I don’t necessarily fault OpenAI’s decision to initially train their models without entering into licensing agreements - they probably wouldn’t exist and the generative AI revolution may never have happened if they put the horse before the cart. I do think they should quickly course correct at this point and accept the fact that they clearly owe something to the creators of content they are consuming. If they don’t, they are setting themselves up for a bigger loss down the road and leaving the door open for a more established competitor (Google) to do it the right way.
Eventually these LLMs are going to be put in mechanical bodies with the ability to interact with the world and learn (update their weights) in realtime. Consider how absurd your perspective would be then, when it'd be illegal for this embodied LLM to read any copyrighted text, be it a book or a web page, without special permission from the copyright holder, while humans face no such restriction.
I have no idea what on earth you are talking about. People and corporations are sued for copyright infringement all the time.
https://copyrightalliance.org/copyright-cases-2022/
Reading and consuming other people content isn't illegal, but it also wouldn't be for a computer.
Reading and consuming content with the sole purpose of reproducing it verbatim is frowned upon, and can be sued, whether it's an LLM or a sweatshop in India.