> If I now go one step further and use an LLM to summarize content because the authentic presentation is so riddled with ads, JavaScript, and pop-ups, that the content becomes borderline unusable, then why would the LLM accessing the website on my behalf be in a different legal category as my Firefox web browser accessing the website on my behalf?
Because the LLM is usually on a 3rd party cloud system and ultimately not under your full control. You have no idea if the LLM is retaining any of that information for that business's own purposes beyond what a EULA says - which basically amounts to a pinky swear here. Especially if that LLM is located across international borders.
Now, for something like Ollama or LMStudio where the LLM and the whole toolchain is physically on your own system? Yeah that should be like Firefox legally since it's under your control.
Because the LLM is usually on a 3rd party cloud system and ultimately not under your full control. You have no idea if the LLM is retaining any of that information for that business's own purposes beyond what a EULA says - which basically amounts to a pinky swear here. Especially if that LLM is located across international borders.
Now, for something like Ollama or LMStudio where the LLM and the whole toolchain is physically on your own system? Yeah that should be like Firefox legally since it's under your control.