Disney's AI lawsuit could shift the future of entertainment
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"Piracy is piracy, and the fact that it's done by an AI company does not make it any less infringing," said Disney general counsel Horacio Gutierrez in a statement. The studios claim Midjourney downloaded copyrighted content from the Internet using "bots, scrapers, streamrippers, video downloaders, and web crawlers" to train its AI model.
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President Trump is claiming that a trade deal with China is "done," but few details are known about the apparent agreement. This follows meetings between senior officials from both nations in London. CBS News' Natalie Brand reports. CNBC's Julia Boorstin reports on news regarding AI and Hollywood.
Google’s push to court creative types coincides with a separate initiative to help AI technology overcome its massive public relations problem.
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A rare study out of Hong Kong on screenwriting and AI shows how Chinese screenwriters are applying the technology.
The head of the AI video generation platform dives into the AI art debate tearing through the creative industry.
Asa Fitch: It's basically because expectations have become ... Belle Lin: Jessica, why are so many people in Hollywood cautious about putting generative AI into any aspect of movie and television ...
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Straight Arrow News (English) on MSNDisney, Universal seek $150K per image in new AI lawsuitTwo of the biggest names in entertainment are suing an artificial intelligence company for alleged copyright infringement. Disney and Universal filed a lawsuit Wednesday against Midjourney, claiming the AI firm used copyrighted content without permission to train its image-generation tools.