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ChatGPT, Google, Meta AI - high risk intended protection laws

         

Whitey

6:53 pm on Nov 26, 2024 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member Top Contributors Of The Month



Universal laws may be underway to protect creators:

ChatGPT, Meta and Google generative AI should be designated 'high-risk' under new laws, bipartisan committee recommends

In short:

A dedicated artificial intelligence (AI) act should be created that can regulate the most high-risk technologies, a bipartisan committee has agreed.

It also accused tech giants of stealing from Australian creators, and urged the government to develop a scheme to ensure fair remuneration when creative work is used by AI tools.
What's next?

The federal government is developing a model to address high-risk AI technology.

[abc.net.au...]

Featured image: webmasterworld
www.abc.net.au
Senators say generative AI represents 'unprecedented theft' and must be forced to pay creators for their work
Generative artificial intelligence tools like OpenAI's ChatGPT should be deemed "high-risk" under dedicated legislation that could enable the most dangerous technologies to be banned, a bipartisan committee recommends. It says AI companies have also committed "unprecedented theft" against creative workers and a fair compensation system should be developed.

Micha

8:27 pm on Nov 26, 2024 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member Top Contributors Of The Month



Can I borrow a few Australian politicians for the EU?

Dimitri

10:18 pm on Nov 26, 2024 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 5+ Year Member Top Contributors Of The Month



You know, if such thing passes, they are not going to pay small publishers, they'll make deals with big news sites and big publishers.

Whitey

2:04 am on Nov 27, 2024 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member Top Contributors Of The Month



You know, if such thing passes, they are not going to pay small publishers, they'll make deals with big news sites and big publishers.


The global legal framework is evolving. This article regarding ai and copyright was just published in the US:

[news.bloomberglaw.com...]