I feel like you’re still using hyperbole here. For example, you said your family photos were used for training, but most cloud photo providers specifically tell you in their privacy policies (legally binding) that they don’t do that.
My family photos have never trained AI, because my iCloud Photos service specifically says they don’t do that and explains the technical implementation of their object recognition system in detail. Apple even offers an e2e encrypted mode of operation. (Still, I have now moved to a more customer-friendly solution away from iCloud).
As far as training on your code, well, you either believe in open source or you don’t. AI training doesn’t even violate the most copyleft open source licenses. Unless AI has reproduced your code verbatim it’s not engaging in any kind of copyright reproduction.
My family photos have never trained AI, because my iCloud Photos service specifically says they don’t do that and explains the technical implementation of their object recognition system in detail. Apple even offers an e2e encrypted mode of operation. (Still, I have now moved to a more customer-friendly solution away from iCloud).
As far as training on your code, well, you either believe in open source or you don’t. AI training doesn’t even violate the most copyleft open source licenses. Unless AI has reproduced your code verbatim it’s not engaging in any kind of copyright reproduction.