Obviously, if you create a page-for-page match for some 500-page novel this still won't save you, because no one's going to buy your claim to have stumbled on that independently. This isn't licence to do large-scale copying and then try to claim you had no idea that somebody else wrote the exact same book. But this is the exact sort of case where demonstrating that there was no way that the putative copies are actually copies means the lawsuit will fail.
Bear in mind I'm talking about the intended purpose of the law. There are borderline and questionable cases where you may feel, even with substantial justification, that the court ruled against this principle. But this is at least the clear intention of the system.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Substantial_similarity#Substan... says:
> it refers to that level of similarity sufficient to prove that copying has occurred, once access has been demonstrated.
darth_avocado•6h ago
HenryBemis•5h ago