Showing posts with the label licensing

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AI - Governing the Unknown and Making Mischief

As we delve into the peculiar world of artificial intelligence (AI). Let's highlight the exciting challenges that AI brings to our society and the solutions that could save the day. Need for Speed? More Like Need for Banana Peels! Picture this: policymakers scrambling to catch up with AI development, but their efforts are as futile as chasing a greased pig. As it turns out, technology moves faster than a cat on a hot tin roof, leaving them in a comical state of disarray. We might as well hand them a bunch of banana peels and watch them slip and slide through their futile attempts to regulate AI.   #AIChaos #TechFasterThanPolicymakers #SlipperyRegulations #ChasingBananaPeels #FutileAttempts The Art of Unpredictability: A Rollercoaster Ride AI is the wild child of technology, and even those creating it don't have a clue where it's headed. It's like giving a mischievous monkey a box of surprises and letting it loose in a theme park. No matter how well-intentioned the r...

The Robo-Rights

Copyright Protection: The Rise of Robo-Rights! There’s a growing debate among copyright lawyers about whether the producer of graphical AI technologies, such as MidJourney and Dall-E, should be granted copyright protection. The rule of the Copyright Office, so far at least, is that they should not. Maybe, the Office suggests, if the artist demonstrates sufficiently creative prompts. But so far, the Copyright Office has rejected copyright in every case presented to it. AI Artists Demand Copyright Protection: The Rise of Robo-Rights! This conclusion is not just wrong. It is a strategic mistake. There is no reason under existing law why the user of a machine that produces creative work shouldn’t be granted a copyright. And the chance to craft a regime that could efficiently secure copyright to the users of AI is an opportunity for copyright generally that we should not miss.   In a world where humans and AI collaborate to create art, we must acknowledge the role of the human artist op...