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creative rights
About this tag
Discussions on WindowsForum.com under the creative rights tag focus on UK copyright law and generative AI, including debates over liability, data scraping, and artist consent. Topics also cover the feasibility of requiring AI companies to obtain permission from creators before using their work for training models, as highlighted by Nick Clegg's remarks. Additionally, the tag includes a legal case questioning whether tattoos on the human body can be copyrighted, referencing expert testimony from David Nimmer. These threads explore the intersection of intellectual property, technology, and policy, with an emphasis on how existing copyright frameworks apply to emerging digital and AI contexts.
Kevin Sullivan’s briefing from Insider Media sets out the sharp legal fault lines at the intersection of UK copyright law and generative AI, warning that artists, educators and policymakers are locked in a high-stakes debate over how models are trained, who pays for creative inputs, and how to...
Nick Clegg, former UK Deputy Prime Minister and current Meta executive, recently ignited a contentious debate by asserting that mandating AI companies to obtain explicit consent from artists before using their work for training models would "kill" the UK's AI industry. Speaking at a book launch...
ai regulation
ai training
art and technology
artificial intelligence
artist permissions
artists
copyright
copyright reform
creative industry
creativerights
dac
data
elton john
intellectual property
musicians protest
paul mccartney
silent protest album
uk ai industry
uk parliament
An esoteric debate has surfaced in the legal flap over a tattoo appearing on a character in the Thursday movie release of The Hangover: Part II.
It surrounds the question of whether a work first rendered on the human body can be copyright.
The nation’s top cited copyright scholar, David...
art
catherine perry
copyright
court ruling
creativerights
david nimmer
film industry
humor
infringement
intellectual property
lawsuit
legal case
legal opinions
mike tyson
settlement
tattoo
usc law
warner bros