At an AI summit at the White House, OpenAI CEO Sam Altman said his company is working on AI models that respect copyright. The goal, he said, is for content creators to be paid when their content, or in the case of images, their style, is used. Technical details are not yet known. Possible options for text generation would be a Spotify-like streaming solution based on the tokens used if the generation can be uniquely attributed to sources, or a flat rate based on the amount of data one provides to OpenAI.
Source: OpenAI works on copyright solution for large AI models

In December, Canadian illustrator and content creator Sam Yang received a snide email from a stranger asking him to judge a sort of AI battle royale in which he could decide which custom artificial intelligence image generator best mimicked his own style. In the months since Stability AI released the Stable Diffusion generator, AI enthusiasts had rejiggered the tool to produce images in the style of specific artists; all they needed was a sample of a hundred or so images.
The annual Irish Music Rights Organization (IMRO) and Law Society Annual Copyright Lecture has been told that an EU Copyright directive “clearly improves” the position of press publishers and journalists in their relationship with technology giants. Dr Mark Hyland (IMRO Adjunct Professor of Intellectual Property at the Law Society) warned, however, that some of the wording in the directive was ambiguous, and could lead to litigation.
SoundCloud has teamed up with Merlin, the digital music licensing agency for independent labels, on a global licensing deal, allowing Merlin members and their artists to participate in SoundCloud’s Fan-Powered Royalties (FPR) model. Unlike the traditional pro-rata “one big pot” streaming model, FPR is a user-centric model that allocates a share of each listener’s subscription and advertising revenues only to the artists/tracks they individually listen to.

