Copyright and the Training of Human Authors and Generative Machines
Speaker: Prof. Robert Brauneis (George Washington University)
Chair: Prof. Christophe Geiger (Director of ILEO, Luiss Guido Carli)
Date and Time: November 28th, 2024, 14:00 – 15:30hrs.
Aula 18 – Via Parenzo
https://luiss.webex.com/luiss/j.php?MTID=m9629bc5850e3c2daeec718b61f38e8f8
Please register and confirm your attendance at ileo@luiss.it (mandatory for externals to enter the Luiss Premises)
Abstract
Human authors typically end up paying some amount, directly or indirectly, for most of the copyrighted works from which they learn. Should it be different when human beings use copyrighted works to train generative AI models? In this talk, Prof. Brauneis will consider the arguments that generative AI training should not require copyright licensing because it amounts to a "nonexpressive use" that is outside the scope of copyright protection, or because training is like reading, viewing or listening, activities that do not implicate the exclusive rights of copyright. These arguments raise some of the most basic issues of the purpose of copyright -- is it to protect the entertainment value of works, or also the educational value? -- as well as basic issues about the structure of copyright's exclusive rights, and the comparison between human "reading" and computer "ingestion."
About the Speaker
Robert Brauneis is the Michael J. McKeon Professor of Intellectual Property Law at The George Washington University Law School, and Co-Director of the GW Center for Law and Technology. After earning his Juris Doctor magna cum laude at Harvard Law School, he served as a law clerk to Judge Stephen G. Breyer of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the First Circuit (late a U.S. Supreme Court Justice), and to U.S. Supreme Court Justice David H. Souter. He is the co-author of a leading casebook on copyright law, and of numerous articles on copyright, trademark, and constitutional law. Prof. Brauneis is a member of the Project Board of the Munich Intellectual Property Law Center and has served as a Trustee of the Copyright Society of the USA and as the inaugural Abraham L. Kaminstein Scholar in Residence at the United States Copyright Office.