Can Machines be Authors?
Using newer forms of Artificial Intelligence (AI), including General Adversarial Networks (GANs), AI machines are increasingly good at emulating humans and laying siege to what has been a strictly human…
Using newer forms of Artificial Intelligence (AI), including General Adversarial Networks (GANs), AI machines are increasingly good at emulating humans and laying siege to what has been a strictly human…
…they all thrive in environments where there are no artificial technical or legal boundaries to the accessibility, circulation and consumption of content. Based on the data, shadow libraries facilitate a…
The use of artificial intelligence (AI) tools raises possible issues of bias, discrimination and transparency that need to be investigated by (legal) researchers. But AI tools can also support the…
…changes to make the rules more balanced. 6. Before the Singularity: Copyright and the Challenges of Artificial Intelligence In May, the ECS held their annual summit in Brussels, under the…
…and November 1) Ex Machina, Ex Auctore? Machines that create and how EU copyright law views them by Ana Ramalho “The creation of works by artificial intelligence systems (AIS) challenges…
The creation of works by artificial intelligence systems (AIS) challenges our perception of creativity and, with it, of eligibility for copyright protection. Examples abound. AIS can autonomously create paintings, literary…
In May, the ECS held their annual summit in Brussels, under the title “EU copyright, quo vadis? From the EU copyright package to the challenges of Artificial Intelligence.” The summit…
…platform is complemented by other types of technology, for example artificial intelligence. In finishing, he stated that blockchain should be considered a tool that is beneficial for working within collective…
…Artificial Intelligence. These key issues were at the heart of the annual IP conference organised by the University of Geneva on February 22, 2017 (programme available here). The approach taken…
…system (including distribution to member states) and whether the self-funding of the office is consequently at risk. On being asked (by Trevor Cook) whether fees at OHIM are set artificially…