Copyright and Ia: European Legislation Deemed Not to Be Adequate
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3 Articles
Generative artificial intelligence (AI) places a "strong legal uncertainty" on the remuneration of copyrights in the European Union where regulation is "not adapted" to these new tools, according to an information report by the French National Assembly published on Wednesday. The post Copyright and IA: the European regulation judged not to be adequate, appears first on LesEco.ma.
As artificial and generative intelligence disrupts digital creation, a report by the National Assembly points to a worrying legal gap in copyright. The European Union, under the guidance of a directive dating from 2019, appears ill prepared to deal with these new technologies.
Creation generated by IA: the question of human originality The first condition of copyright protection is originality, understood as the imprint of the author's personality. However, this requirement excludes de facto a creation entirely generated by artificial intelligence, which does not possess the status of a natural person. In France as in the European Union, the texts are clear: only a human can hold rights. Directive 2001/29/EC and the I…
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