- The new campaign 'Make It Fair' wants to address the 'Content theft'
- British creatives come together to urge a stronger copyright law
- AI use content without permission or compensation
Artificial intelligence and large languages are trained in online information treasures, including songs, articles, comments, books, drawings, images and more, so if you have ever commented on an Instagram post, you publish a photo in Twitter or loaded a YouTube video: The probability is that your work has been used to train a model at some time or another.
These models do not request permission, nor notify the creator, and these models make millions from the content. According to the reports, Operai used more than one million youtube video hours to train GPT -4, and Meta uses Public Publications of Instagram and Facebook to train their AI model, but the British creatives are joining to defend themselves.
Artists, singers, authors, journalists and screenwriters (and more), who collectively generate more than £ 120 billion per year for the economy of the nation, have joined to urge the United Kingdom government to apply the British law of rights of rights of rights of rights of rights Author to AI companies and to guarantee “ content theft 'is not legitimized when leaving this problem without control.
Do it fair
The 'Make It Fair' campaign reaches the end of the AI consultation period and the copyright of the British Government, in which it is reviewing ways to boost trust and transparency between the sectors, and “ensure that the developers of the IA have Access to high quality material to train models in the United Kingdom and support innovation throughout the United Kingdom's sector. ”
Owen Meredith, the News Media Association CEO, which launched the campaign, added that the “Golden Standard” rights laws of the United Kingdom have supported the growth and creation of employment in the British economy, and without the content that They produce, the innovation of AI would not exist.
“And for a healthy democratic society, copyright are fundamental for the ability of editors to invest in reliable quality journalism,” said Meredith.
“The only thing you need to affirm is that these laws also apply to AI, and transparency requirements must be introduced to allow creators to understand when their content is used. Instead, the Government proposes to weaken the law and essentially make legal content.
The AI is at the forefront of productivity discussions in the United Kingdom at this time, since the prime minister published plans to 'turbocar ai' in the public sector, including the idea of 'unlocking' public data by delivering them to 'researchers and innovative 'to train AI models.