"Somebody's getting paid, so why shouldn't it be the guy who sat down and wrote 'Yesterday'?" the former Beatle said.
Paul McCartney said proposed changes to copyright laws that would allow AI developers to use content will make it difficult ...
Sir Paul McCartney has told the BBC proposed changes to copyright law could allow "rip off" technology that might make it ...
A jury ruled that M. Night Shyamalan did not copy a plaintiff's film writing the Apple series 'Servant,' ending the ...
Musician Sir Paul McCartney has advised that AI could “rip off” artists if a proposed revamp of the copyright regulations by ...
Fair use traditionally applies to specific, limited uses—not wholesale ingestion of copyrighted content on a global scale.
Paul McCartney is cautioning against proposed changes to British copyright law that would allow AI developers to use online creators' content for development purposes.
Paul McCartney has urged the British government not to make a change to copyright laws that he says could let artificial ...
9:46Oh, bother! How Winnie-the-Pooh and Emily Dickinson highlight the flaws in U.S. copyright laws When A.A. Milne's beloved 1926 classic short-story collection Winnie-the-Pooh entered the public ...
Paul McCartney called on the British government to protect artists in the face of a new copyright law that could allow for AI to "rip off" creators.
Despite the D.C. push to establish guardrails around artificial intelligence, major studios are warning against “inflexible” rules when it comes to copyright, asserting that existing law is ...
Photo credit: Ben Birchall/PA Wire A British music trade association has issued a stark warning against the UK government’s proposed changes to copyright law following uncertainty around how ...