Learn more about MIT Sloan professor Thomas Malone's proposal for "learnright" laws that would give copyright holders the exclusive right to license their content to AI companies for model training: bit.ly/4u2rfvB
Human content creators are protected by copyright law, but whether these laws allow AI models to learn from human-created content is up for debate. MIT Sloan professor Thomas Malone proposes “learnright” laws that would give copyright holders the exclusive right to license their content to AI companies for model training.
Learn more: bit.ly/4u2rfvB
Human content creators are protected by copyright law, but whether these laws allow AI models to learn from human-created content is up for debate. MIT Sloan professor Thomas Malone proposes “learnright” laws that would give copyright holders the exclusive right to license their content to AI companies for model training.
Learn more: bit.ly/4u2rfvB
“Copyright law wasn’t designed for a world with generative AI, and without something like learnright laws, the incentives for people to create new content are likely to be greatly reduced.” — Thomas Malone, MIT Sloan professor bit.ly/4u2rfvB
Learn more about MIT Sloan professor Thomas Malone's proposal for "learnright" laws that would give copyright holders the exclusive right to license their content to AI companies for model training: bit.ly/4u2rfvB
Human content creators are protected by copyright law, but whether these laws allow AI models to learn from human-created content is up for debate. MIT Sloan professor Thomas Malone proposes “learnright” laws that would give copyright holders the exclusive right to license their content to AI companies for model training.
Learn more: bit.ly/4u2rfvB
U.S. law hasn’t determined whether using copyrighted content to train AI models is fair use or infringement. Three researchers make the case for “learnright” laws.
Learn more at the link below.
bit.ly/48ZGyNk
Learn more about MIT Sloan professor Thomas Malone's proposal for "learnright" laws that would give copyright holders the exclusive right to license their content to AI companies for model training: bit.ly/4u2rfvB
“Copyright law wasn’t designed for a world with generative AI, and without something like learnright laws, the incentives for people to create new content are likely to be greatly reduced.” — Thomas Malone, MIT Sloan professor bit.ly/4u2rfvB
Learnright is more universal and basic than copyright. AI does not copy it learns and we generally allow and encourage learning from our intellectual outputs.
That’s why it’s complicated to regulate AI.
2/2 I know your eyes are on the goal but how will you get there without a solid background on the technicalities.... ?
I know those who do well in every field are good learners... Learn to be a good hand in what you do.
Let's journey together 💓
#Web3#LearnRight