




John P. Strohm
49.9K posts

@johnpstrohm
Dude from Blake Babies and Lemonheads, music lawyer, former president of Rounder Records (2017-22). Opinions expressed mine alone.






🚨 SAM ALTMAN: “People talk about how much energy it takes to train an AI model … But it also takes a lot of energy to train a human. It takes like 20 years of life and all of the food you eat during that time before you get smart.”

Bondi: “Donald Trump signed that law to release all of those documents. He is the most transparent president in the nation’s history” @Grok, remind us how Trump fought against this bill and what he reportedly said to Republicans who signed the discharge petition. Keep it short

iHeartRadio has banned its radio stations from playing AI-generated music or using AI-generated personalities, as part of its “Guaranteed Human” program.

People keep saying “AI training on books is theft,” but that only works if you fundamentally misunderstand what training actually is. Here’s the simplest, most human analogy. When a child learns to read, they absorb patterns from thousands of sentences. They learn grammar, rhythm, storytelling, vocabulary, structure. Their brain builds an internal model of how language works. Later, that child writes something new. What they write is influenced by everything they’ve read, but it is not a copy of any book. It’s a transformed, abstracted understanding. No one would ever claim the child is “stealing” from every author they learned from. No one expects them to pay royalties to the books they used to learn how to write. No one thinks learning itself is a crime. Learning doesn’t duplicate the original. It synthesizes patterns into something new. AI does the exact same thing. It learns statistical patterns of language. Just like we do. If pattern learning were theft, then every human writer would be guilty. Every journalist, scientist, poet, novelist, teacher, and student. Humanity itself would be a copyright violation. The output matters, not the learning. If an AI copied a book verbatim and sold it, that would be theft. But training? That’s just learning, the same process every human mind goes through. If we criminalize learning, we don’t just break AI. We break everything.


A live performance of East Nashville Song About A Train on the Morsecode Podcast. We talked about my NYC days, Letterman, The Dolls, my good brother the late great Todd Snider, and got heavily into my solo career, songwriting process, and approach to recording music.










