AI bots need consent to use our material, say news groups
ADVERTISEMENT

Welcome, Kapamilya! We use cookies to improve your browsing experience. Continuing to use this site means you agree to our use of cookies. Tell me more!
AI bots need consent to use our material, say news groups
Agence France-Presse
Published Aug 10, 2023 04:21 AM PHT
|
Updated Aug 10, 2023 05:49 AM PHT

PARIS - Artificial intelligence firms must ask for permission before using copyrighted text and images to generate content, a consortium of newsgroups said on Wednesday.
PARIS - Artificial intelligence firms must ask for permission before using copyrighted text and images to generate content, a consortium of newsgroups said on Wednesday.
Media organizations including AFP, Getty Images and the Associated Press said in an open letter that AI tools risk shattering their business models, flooding the web with misinformation and breaking copyright laws.
Media organizations including AFP, Getty Images and the Associated Press said in an open letter that AI tools risk shattering their business models, flooding the web with misinformation and breaking copyright laws.
AI tools like chatbot ChatGPT and image generators DALL-E 2, Stable Diffusion and Midjourney exploded in popularity last year with their ability to generate a wealth of content from just brief text prompts.
AI tools like chatbot ChatGPT and image generators DALL-E 2, Stable Diffusion and Midjourney exploded in popularity last year with their ability to generate a wealth of content from just brief text prompts.
However, the firms behind the tools, including OpenAI and Stability AI, already face lawsuits from artists, authors and others claiming their work has been ripped off.
However, the firms behind the tools, including OpenAI and Stability AI, already face lawsuits from artists, authors and others claiming their work has been ripped off.
ADVERTISEMENT
Wednesday's open letter from news organizations including European Pressphoto Agency and Gannett/USA TODAY is the latest attempt to influence the debate by organizations that have much to lose if AI firms continue to scrape material from the internet without restrictions.
Wednesday's open letter from news organizations including European Pressphoto Agency and Gannett/USA TODAY is the latest attempt to influence the debate by organizations that have much to lose if AI firms continue to scrape material from the internet without restrictions.
WATERMARKING PLEDGE
"Generative AI and large language models make it possible for any actor, without regard to their intent, to produce and distribute synthetic content at a scale that far exceeds our past experience," the newsgroups wrote.
"Generative AI and large language models make it possible for any actor, without regard to their intent, to produce and distribute synthetic content at a scale that far exceeds our past experience," the newsgroups wrote.
They listed potential problems including copyright breaches, a flood of false or biased content, and the creation of a vicious cycle where media groups can no longer fund journalism to provide reliable information.
They listed potential problems including copyright breaches, a flood of false or biased content, and the creation of a vicious cycle where media groups can no longer fund journalism to provide reliable information.
The organizations said they wanted to be part of the solution and called for talks to ensure legal access to content.
The organizations said they wanted to be part of the solution and called for talks to ensure legal access to content.
AI firms have attracted billions in investment and all big tech firms have pivoted towards the technology, with Google and Microsoft leading the way.
AI firms have attracted billions in investment and all big tech firms have pivoted towards the technology, with Google and Microsoft leading the way.
ADVERTISEMENT
Major companies in the field have formed several coalitions -- including the Partnership on AI and the Frontier Model Forum -- and largely push for self-regulation.
Major companies in the field have formed several coalitions -- including the Partnership on AI and the Frontier Model Forum -- and largely push for self-regulation.
They committed in July to taking measures like watermarking AI content and have broadly pledged to fight misinformation but with no specific timetables or measures.
They committed in July to taking measures like watermarking AI content and have broadly pledged to fight misinformation but with no specific timetables or measures.
However, little has been said about copyright, which is likely to be a much thornier and potentially expensive issue.
However, little has been said about copyright, which is likely to be a much thornier and potentially expensive issue.
Google used a public consultation in Australia earlier this year to call for a "fair dealing" exception in copyright law specifically to allow data mining for AI.
Google used a public consultation in Australia earlier this year to call for a "fair dealing" exception in copyright law specifically to allow data mining for AI.
RELATED VIDEO
Read More:
artificial intelligence
AI
media organizations
AFP
Getty Images
Associated Press
AI bots
ChatGPT
DALL-E 2
Stable Diffusion
ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT