As artificial intelligence continues to advance, it poses a threat to the very foundations of intellectual property. In AI versus IP, Robin Feldman offers a balanced perspective on the challenges we face at the intersections of AI and IP. The book examines how the advancement of AI threatens to undermine what we choose to protect with intellectual property, such as patents, trademarks, copyrights, and trade secrets, and how it derives its value. Using analogies such as the value of diamonds and the myths that support intangible rights, the book proposes potential solutions to ensure a peaceful co-existence between AI and IP. AI and IP can co-exist, Feldman argues, but only with effort and forethought.
This book explores the challenges posed to intellectual property by the rise of AI. It offers insights into potential solutions that balance AI's ongoing development with the protection of intellectual property, arguing that AI and IP can peacefully coexist, but only with careful forethought.
Muu info
Examines how the rise of AI impacts intellectual property. Explores challenges posed by AI and offers solutions to preserve IP.
Introduction; Part I. Background on AI and IP:
1. An overview of
artificial intelligence;
2. An overview of intellectual property; Part II.
Hot Topics in AI and IP:
3. Do training models infringe copyright?;
4. What
to do when AI creates;
5. Right of publicity and deep fakes; Part III. The
Deeper Problem for IP:
6. Shrinking the pool;
7. Shrinking the value
proposition; Part IV. Pathways Forward:
8. The allegory of the diamond;
9.
Preserving value by limiting;
10. Preserving value by certification;
Conclusion.
Robin Feldman is the Arthur J. Goldberg Distinguished Professor of Law and Director of the AI Law and Innovation Institute at the University of California Law, San Francisco. Over the last decade, she has provided technical advice on AI policy to the US government, including committees of Congress, the Army Cyber Institute, the Government Accountability Office (GAO), the Department of Justice, and other federal and state agencies.