Remove topics bots
article thumbnail

Why Bots Shouldn’t Decide Copyright Cases

Plagiarism Today

However, it did inspire more litigation in this space and, according to reports, kept many lawyers busy answering calls on the topic. The Battle of the Bots. But, even if it were, a bot would be a poor substitute for a jury. The goal is to find ways to pass the bot’s tests, while defeating its purpose.

Copyright 243
article thumbnail

Does Generative AI Need to Infringe Copyright to Create?

JD Supra Law

Using a simple question-and-answer chat structure, a user can ask the ChatGPT bot a question on any topic, or request it to fulfil a range of demands, including writing poems, essays and songs, or even suggesting dinner recipes based on a set list of ingredients. By: Blake, Cassels & Graydon LLP

Insiders

Sign Up for our Newsletter

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

Trending Sources

article thumbnail

Music Industry Flags Discord and Reddit as Primary Piracy Threats

TorrentFreak

The popular social media platform is used to discuss virtually every topic imaginable and pre-release music piracy is no exception. It previously did the same with Telegram, which subsequently took action against infringing channels and bots. Copyright infringement is a problem on Reddit too, according to IFPI.

Music 145
article thumbnail

IP Protection for Artificial Intelligence

LexBlog IP

This, of course, assumes the code was written by a human and not a bot (or a monkey). Patent Protection Patentability of software has been a hot topic for the better part of 50 years. ChatGPT is clearly valuable to OpenAI and presumably is kept under proverbial lock and key to protect its secrecy.

IP 52
article thumbnail

Use of large language models in the patent industry: A risk to patent quality?

The IPKat

The most obvious use case for LLMs is therefore chat-bots. LLM are undeniably very good at providing generic text on a topic for which the internet provides extensive guidance, and for which a deep understanding of complex specialist technical issues is not required.

article thumbnail

Once Again, LinkedIn Can’t Use CFAA To Stop Unwanted Scraping–hiQ v. LinkedIn

Technology & Marketing Law Blog

I assume something that screens out bots (like a captcha) would not suffice, but the opinion is not explicit. Contact me if you are willing to teach this topic to my Internet Law students, because today I have no clue how to help them understand the CFAA. As my list of open issues shows, we know very little about the CFAA right now.

article thumbnail

Previewing the “Lessons from the First Internet Ages” Symposium

Technology & Marketing Law Blog

There would be bots that would be created so that it would look like people were reading the reviews and they really weren’t, I mean, it ultimately was the wrong set of incentives.” So maybe an interesting topic to consider is if Wikipedia is the model for a high-quality output of online community and user-generated content.”