Copyright Law Meets Generative Models: Harnessing AI for Dispute Resolution

  • 28 November 2024
    4:30 PM
  • Meeting room nr. 300, Komenského náměstí 220/2
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Niva Elkin-Koren is a Professor of Law at Tel Aviv University Faculty of Law and a Faculty Associate at the Berkman Klein Center for Internet & Society at Harvard University. She is the academic director of the Chief Justice Meir Shamgar Center for Digital Law and Innovation, a co-director of the Algorithmic Governance Lab at TAU Innovation Lab (“TIL”) and a member of the Academic Management Committee of TAU Center for Artificial Intelligence and Data Science. Before joining Tel-Aviv University, she served as the Dean of the Law Faculty at the University of Haifa, and
was the founding director of the Center for Cyber, Law and Policy (CCLP) and of the Haifa Center for Law and Technology (HCLT). Her research is located at the intersection between law and information technology, focusing on values in design, intellectual property, governance by AI and governance of AI.

Anotation

The rise of Generative Artificial Intelligence models (“is disrupting copyright law and challenging some of its fundamental concepts, including authorship, reproduction, and learning. GenAI models are trained on examples, many of which are original expressions protected by copyright. While copyright law prohibits the unauthorized copying of protected expressions, it permits the extrapolation and learning of ideas. For centuries, courts have struggled to distinguish between original expressions and generic ones, often resulting in systematic overprotection of copyrighted works. GenAI introduces new opportunities to refine and enhance this legal analysis. This talk will explore preliminary findings of interdisciplinary research that demonstrate how GenAI models could be leveraged to inform legal decisions.

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