
Dyuti Pandya
Articles
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1 month ago |
cepa.org | Bill Rosenblatt |Andres Guadamuz |Seth Hays |Dyuti Pandya
No one knows how US courts will rule on the growing list of AI copyright lawsuits. It will be a long road. Copyright law often takes decades to adapt to new technologies; for example, more than a decade passed from the launch of the pioneering file-sharing music software Napster until courts shut down the last file-sharing service. Fewer than three years have passed since OpenAI launched ChatGPT. In the absence of legal clarity, licensing is racing ahead.
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1 month ago |
cepa.org | Andres Guadamuz |Bill Rosenblatt |Seth Hays |Dyuti Pandya
The status quo on AI and copyright in the UK is a lose-lose. Restrictive copyright laws have left AI developers unsure about how they can legally access training data and content creators worry their work is being used illegally. Prime Minister Keir Starmer wants to make the UK an AI “superpower.” Copyright presents a major hurdle. The UK government knows. In December, it announced plans to weaken copyright protections to encourage AI.
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1 month ago |
cepa.org | Andres Guadamuz |Bill Rosenblatt |Seth Hays |Dyuti Pandya
Bandwidth is CEPA’s online journal dedicated to advancing transatlantic cooperation on tech policy. All opinions are those of the author and do not necessarily represent the position or views of the institutions they represent or the Center for European Policy Analysis.
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