Machines ‘Copy,’ Humans ‘Learn’ — from Sandra Aistars: “I’ve noticed that AI models are bad at understanding context — and therefore in drawing the right conclusions — in both art and law. My theory is that this is because, unlike artists and lawyers who study the underlying narrative and logic of a work case by case, AI models mechanically copy undifferentiated data and then repeat the statistically most probable lines. They do not engage the original work or the artist on their terms.”
Mass Resignations Call into Question Legitimacy of ALI Copyright Restatement — “From the beginning, many copyright experts, professors, and lawmakers questioned the rationale behind attempting to ‘restate’ an area of law governed by a federal statute, and they warned that the Copyright Restatement was more likely to look like a restatement of the Reporters’ views on copyright rather than a restatement of actual copyright law.”
Internet Archive Ordered to Block Books in Belgium After Talks With Publishers Fail — “After initially avoiding external blocking measures, the Internet Archive must block access to various books in its Open Library project under the orders of a Belgian government department. While the final decision avoids a full site blockade, it forces the U.S. non-profit to implement country-specific censorship or face a €500,000 penalty, raising questions about the use of anti-piracy frameworks to settle complex copyright disputes.”
Motion Picture Association Blasts OpenAI Over Sora 2 Video Copyright Opt-Outs — “Sora 2 was introduced with the idea that creators could opt out if they object to having their characters or copyrighted work used on the site. Under copyright law, rightsholders can sue and obtain statutory damages for individual acts of infringement — regardless of whether the infringer offers an opt-out or not.”
Legal battle over China-based ‘ultra-fast-fashion’ will go forward for now — “Temu’s entry into the market brought a quick reaction from Shein—but according to the complaint, not a lawful one. Indeed, threatened by Temu’s rise, Temu claims, Shein ‘hatched a desperate plan’ to disrupt Temu’s operations and slow its growth in the United States. That scheme, Temu claims, runs the gamut from abusing the Digital Millenium Copyright Act, copying Temu’s intellectual property, stealing its confidential information, and tying up Chinese suppliers through exclusive-dealing agreements and intimidation, to filing dubious infringement lawsuits and defrauding the U.S. Copyright Office.”