Next year should be marked by an avalanche of legal actions against major artificial intelligence operators, whether the giants of the sector – Microsoft, Google, Amazon – or “pure players” like OpenAI or Anthropic. These upcoming trials will be based on the fact that large language models (LLM) like ChatGPT for text, or MidJourney for images have generously “sucked up” everything they found, from books that fell into the public domain to ‘to the portfolio of a great photographer. These immense bodies of work make it possible to create content imitating millions of artists. All creative sectors are concerned: literature, journalism, audiovisual production, graphic arts, architecture.
No doubt learning from the past, AI operators plan to take the lead. As Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella told L’Express (see the episode of Control F of October 4), it is imperative to imagine a value sharing system now.
The law firm created by Thaima Samman follows these questions in Paris and Brussels. Today, files related to artificial intelligence absorb more than half of its resources.
In this episode of Control F, the lawyer explains the legal framework in which AI evolves and insists on the fact that current laws already offer solid protection for intellectual property holders.
Listen to this episode and subscribe to Control F on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Castbox, Deezer, Google Podcast And Amazon Music.
The team: Frédéric Filloux (presentation) and Jules Krot (editing and production)
Music and design: Léonard Filloux
Logo: Jérémy Cambour/L’Express
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