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Artificial Intelligence: News Releases and In the News


Sag on the ongoing legal skirmishes between publishers, OpenAI

Sag: Challenge over hallucinations could create 'immense difficulties' for AI companies

Sag comments on Penguin's 'do not scrape for AI' stance

Sag sides with parents who sued son's school for punishing his AI use

Sag: It's time to replace Communications Decency Act's liability shield

Sag: Too soon to tell if new AI film tool will create or destroy jobs

Sag: There's an intrinsic difference in how ChatGPT and humans produce language

Sag on AI in film: Does it learn or copy while training?

Morris: Claiming ownership of future social posts is worthless

Ajunwa: Human bias can influence AI hiring systems

Morris: AI will provide a 'huge boost' for smaller firms

Ajunwa: New federal AI standards may inspire more agencies to use it

Ajunwa: Don't let AI's 'seeming efficiency' take over human dignity

Ajunwa: Integrate experiential AI, data analysis skills across higher ed

Morris on what IP issues could emerge if computers become inventors

Sag: OpenAI gets sued, now what?

Sag: The flaw that could ruin generative AI

Sag: NYTimes ChatGPT complaint 'impressive'

Sag: Big Tech's IP indemnity clauses may fall short

Sag: NYTimes OpenAI suit shows evidence of memorization

Sag: That ChatGPT bedtime story probably violates trademark law

Ajunwa: Biden’s AI executive order needs teeth

Ajunwa: AI's power and bias need governing

Ajunwa on what Biden's AI order accomplishes

Sag: Copyright doesn't recognize computer systems as authors

Ajunwa warns of 'algorithmic blackballing' in AI hiring systems

Sag: AI terms in strike deal a victory for writers

Ajunwa: US employers still have all the power in the workplace

Sag: What AI art is 'human enough' to earn copyright?

Sag: AI output isn't original expression, nor does it merit copyright

Ajunwa: How AI allows businesses to quantify workers

Sag: Silverman's lawsuit is 'most compelling' AI copyright case thus far

Ajunwa on AI, employer surveillance and 'The Quantified Worker'

Sag testifies on AI, copyright before Senate subcommittee
Earlier this month, Professor Matthew Sag joined an artist whose work has been seen by millions in Marvel blockbusters when both testified before a Senate subcommittee on how U.S. copyright law should address generative artificial intelligence. Other panelists included executives from music, AI, and creative software industries.

Sag: Why Hollywood fears generative AI

Sag: A future of thinking differently about data

Sag: Apple's use of narrators' voices to train AI likely legal

Sag: ChatGPT has no concept of truth and 'will totally lie to you'

Sag: ChatGPT cannot give you Shakespeare

Sag: Fair use, style, transformation affect AI art copyright

Bedzow: What it takes to create and implement ethical artificial intelligence