U.S. Congressman Asks FTC to Investigate Possible ‘Deceptive Acts’ by  PROs 

U.S. Representative Scott Fitzgerald (R-WI) sent a letter to the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) on Monday (Dec. 8) urging the examination of “potential unfair or deceptive acts or practices by performing rights organizations (PROs) which could constitute a violation of Section 5 of the FTC Act.” Specifically, Fitzgerald’s letter, obtained by Billboard, centers its concerns on the two newest PROs in the U.S.: AllTrack and Pro Music Rights.

Source: U.S. Congressman Asks FTC to Investigate Possible ‘Deceptive Acts’ by PROs AllTrack & Pro Music Rights

Google testing AI-powered article overviews on select publications’ Google News pages

News publishers participating in the pilot program include Der Spiegel, El País, Folha, Infobae, Kompas, The Guardian, The Times of India, The Washington Examiner, and The Washington Post, among others. The purpose of the new commercial partnership program is to “explore how AI can drive more engaged audiences,” Google said in a blog post. As part of the new AI pilot program, the company will work with publishers to experiment with new features in Google News.

Source: Google is testing AI-powered article overviews on select publications’ Google News pages | TechCrunch

More Evidence Points to a Sony Music v. Udio Impasse

A Sony Music-Udio settlement appears unlikely for 2025: In keeping with early evidence that the companies would continue litigating, a previously scheduled status conference has officially been axed. Technically, the major label and the AI music generator started December by asking the court to shelve their planned December 12th conference. In the same letter to the presiding judge, the parties, acknowledging “outstanding disputes,” requested yet another discovery document-production delay (the fifth overall).

Source: More Evidence Points to a Sony Music v. Udio Impasse

Inside the Creation of Tilly Norwood, the AI Actress Freaking Out Hollywood

Van der Velden says she is not out to replace real actresses. She is after something else—a new visual language of acid-trippy world building and uncanny realism only made possible by AI. She envisions “a whole new creative renaissance” for filmmakers and fewer financial barriers to new work. Most big movies today cost more than $100 million to make. Van der Velden thinks one done with AI would cost a fraction of that.

Source: Inside the Creation of Tilly Norwood, the AI Actress Freaking Out Hollywood

Indian Gov’t’s working paper on copyright and AI proposes hybrid licensing model

The Government of India has released a landmark working paper proposing a new policy framework to regulate the use of copyright-protected works for training Generative AI systems. The draft, prepared by a committee formed by the Department for Promotion of Industry and Internal Trade (DPIIT), examines whether existing copyright laws adequately address challenges posed by AI technologies and recommends a hybrid statutory licensing model to balance innovation needs with creator rights.

Source: DPIIT releases working paper on copyright and AI, proposes hybrid licensing model

EU Report Distills AI-Training Lessons from Napster Piracy Era: Don’t Sue, License

An in-depth analysis on AI training and copyright, commissioned by the European Parliament, cautions against repeating the mistakes of the early 2000s when online piracy boomed. Instead of suing AI companies into oblivion or relying on “opt-out” mechanisms, the report sees “statutory licenses” as the optimal solution. This effectively authorizes the use of copyrighted works for AI training and should ultimately benefit creators and AI companies.

Source: EU Report Distills AI-Training Lessons from Napster Piracy Era: Don’t Sue, License * TorrentFreak

Penske Media Slaps Google With Amended Antitrust Lawsuit

Billboard owner Penske Media has fired off an amended antitrust lawsuit against Google over its AI search results and training. The company is accusing Google of leveraging its search “monopoly” by effectively compelling publishers to consent to providing content for AI summaries and training. With the ill-advised alternative being to exit Google’s search results outright, publishers are allegedly “caught between either permitting Google’s [AI features] underpayment or suffering existential search traffic declines.”

Source: Penske Media Slaps Google With Amended Antitrust Lawsuit

OpenAI desperate to avoid explaining why it deleted pirated book datasets

OpenAI may soon be forced to explain why it deleted a pair of controversial datasets composed of pirated books, and the stakes could not be higher. At the heart of a class-action lawsuit from authors alleging that ChatGPT was illegally trained on their works, OpenAI’s decision to delete the datasets could end up being a deciding factor that gives the authors the win.

Source: OpenAI desperate to avoid explaining why it deleted pirated book datasets

OpenAI loses fight to keep ChatGPT logs secret in copyright case

 OpenAI must produce millions of anonymized chat logs from ChatGPT users in its high-stakes copyright dispute with the New York Times and other news outlets, a federal judge in Manhattan ruled. U.S. Magistrate Judge Ona Wang in a decision made public on Wednesday that the 20 million logs were relevant to the outlets’ claims and that handing them over would not risk violating users’ privacy.

Source: OpenAI loses fight to keep ChatGPT logs secret in copyright case

Meta signs raft of AI content licensing deals

Meta has signed AI content licensing deals with major publishers including People Inc, CNN and Fox News. The Facebook owner said the deals will help it provide a wider variety of real-time content, including global news, entertainment and lifestyle, on its Meta AI assistant. It noted it will be linking out to the publishers and “allowing you to visit these partners’ websites for more details while providing value to partners, enabling them to reach new audiences”.

Source: Meta signs raft of AI content licensing deals

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