This Week in AI: Generative AI and the problem of compensating creators

A recently published research paper co-authored by Boaz Barak, a scientist on OpenAI’s Superalignment team, proposes a framework to compensate copyright owners “proportionally to their contributions to the creation of AI-generated content.” How? Through cooperative game theory.

Source: This Week in AI: Generative AI and the problem of compensating creators | TechCrunch

Moonbirds Copyright Controversy Exposes Flaws in Crypto’s IP Obsession 

It has never been resolved what exactly IP means in such a context, nor to what extent NFT projects can bestow IP rights onto their holders. Those unanswered questions bubbled back to the surface this week, when Yuga Labs—the multi-billion dollar company behind Bored Ape Yacht Club—announced that it planned to bestow exclusive commercial rights onto holders of Moonbirds.

Source: Moonbirds Copyright Controversy Exposes Flaws in Crypto’s IP Obsession – Decrypt

How generative AI is influencing the creator economy

For many creatives, AI has evolved from a fear striking buzzword to steadfast companion. It’s now a tool that is seamlessly and regularly applied to the whole of the creative process: from ideation, through strategy and production, to execution. Its ability to streamline production and enhance outputs makes it a necessity for industry professionals — if you aren’t using it, your competitors are.

Source: How generative AI is influencing the creator economy

OpenAI Says It Can Now Detect Images Spawned by Its Software

OpenAI on Tuesday is launching a new tool that can detect whether an image was created using the company’s text-to-image generator, DALL-E 3. OpenAI officials said that the tool is highly accurate in detecting DALL-E 3 images, but that small changes to a picture can confuse it—reflecting how artificial-intelligence companies are playing catch up in the ability to track their own technology.

Source: OpenAI Says it Can Now Detect Images Spawned by its Software

Can Copyright Law Save Journalism From A.I.?

A group of newspapers is suing OpenAI and Microsoft, accusing them of effectively stealing—and profiting from—journalists’ work. This could well be an existential legal fight. Some of Silicon Valley’s tech barons are openly hostile to journalism, dreaming of the day when it can be “disrupted” or rendered obsolete. To do so, however, they may have to get through copyright law first.

Source: Can Copyright Law Save Journalism From A.I.?

AI Is Gathering a Growing Amount of Training Data Inside Virtual Worlds

For color images, the widely used RGB (red, green, blue) model can correspond to over 16 million possible colors. So as graphics rendering technology becomes ever more photorealistic, the distinction between pixels captured by real-world cameras and ones rendered in a game engine is falling away.

Source: AI Is Gathering a Growing Amount of Training Data Inside Virtual Worlds

SAG-AFTRA Members Ratify Major Label AI Protection Agreement

Members of SAG-AFTRA voted to ratify the 2024 Sound Recordings Code with record labels, approving a new contract with AI protections. Under this agreement, the terms “artist,” “singer,” and “royalty artist” only include humans, with “clear and conspicuous consent” alongside minimum compensation requirements and specific details of intended use required prior to the release of a sound recording that uses a digital replication of an artist’s voice.

Source: SAG-AFTRA Members Ratify Major Label AI Protection Agreement

SAG-AFTRA Will Use Nielsen Data as Part of Enforcing Studio Pact on Streaming Content

SAG-AFTRA will license Nielsen‘s streaming content data, which the union will to enforce the terms of its 2023 contract with Hollywood studios. Under the deal for Nielsen’s Streaming Content Ratings, SAG-AFTRA will have “an objective source of domestic viewership data for original streaming programming,” the parties announced.

Source: SAG-AFTRA Will Use Nielsen Data as Part of Enforcing Studio Pact on Streaming Content

Sir Lucian Grainge: ‘Greater compensation’ is from TikTok for UMG artists and songwriters

Today’s big news: Universal Music Group and TikTok, by way of a joint announcement, have confirmed that they have struck a new licensing deal – three months after UMG pulled its recordings catalog from the service. What does this new deal mean for UMG and its artists and songwriters? Standout headline: More money. Reminder: according to Universal, TikTok’s royalty payouts to UMG prior to this new deal constituted just 1% of UMG’s total revenues.

Source: Sir Lucian Grainge confirms ‘greater compensation’ is coming from TikTok for UMG artists and songwriters

UK lawmakers call for AI legislation to protect artists from deepfakes

The report calls for the UK to pass new laws that would protect artists’ personalities from being copied by AI without permission; mandate transparent labelling of AI-generated content; and require AI developers to gain permission from copyright holders to use their materials for training, among other things.

Source: UK lawmakers call for AI legislation to protect artists from deepfakes, copyright infringement

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