Here’s just one reason why we can’t trust Big Tech for opt out (or really any other security that stops them from doing what they want to do)

Here’s just one reason why we can’t trust Big Tech for opt out (or really any other security that stops them from doing what they want to do)


The Artist Rights Institute’s news digest Newsletter
Take our new confidential survey for publishers and songwriters!
UK AI Opt-Out Legislation
Human Rights and AI Opt Out (Chris Castle/MusicTechPolicy)
Ticketing
New Oregon bill would ban speculative ticketing, eliminate hidden ticket sale fees, crack down on deceptive resellers (Diane Lugo/Salem Statesman Journal-USA Today)
AI Litigation/Legislation
French Publishers and Authors Sue Meta over Copyright Works Used in AI Training (Kelvin Chan/AP);
AI Layoffs
‘AI Will Be Writing 90% of Code in 3-6 Months,’ Says Anthropic’s Dario Amodei (Ankush Das/Analytics India)
Amazon to Target Managers in 2025’s Bold Layoffs Purge (Anna Verasai/The HR Digest)
AI Litigation: Kadrey v. Meta
Authors Defeat Meta’s Motion to Dismiss AI Case on Meta Removing Watermarks to Promote Infringement
Judge Allows Authors AI Copyright Infringement Lawsuit Against Meta to Move Forward (Anthony Ha/Techcrunch)
America’s AI Action Plan Request for Information
Google and Its Confederate AI Platforms Want Retroactive Absolution for AI Training Wrapped in the American Flag (Chris Castle/MusicTechPolicy)
Google Calls for Weakened Copyright and Export Rules in AI Policy Proposal (Kyle Wiggers/TechCrunch)
Artist Rights Institute Submission
By Chris Castle
This post first appeared on MusicTechPolicy
When you see Big Tech start to make Newspeak noises about wanting to license creative works for artificial intelligence, it’s well to remember a couple facts about how they treat people, business practices that they don’t talk about at parties. Or to Congress.
Take their supply chain, particularly their manufacturing supply chain in China where some of all their products use slave labor. And the cobalt that goes into every battery powered device like your smartphone is obtained through the equally Newspeak “artisanal mining” otherwise known as impossibly poor children mining cobalt by clawing it out of the dirt with their bare hands. You know, “artisanal”. (Read Cobalt Red by Sid Kara for that story.). Not to mention the grotesque and parasitic waste of electricity and the resources that provide it whether they are crowding out the public investment in renewables or driving coal powered generators. They don’t talk about it because they feel entitled to all of it which is to be expected from that feeder school for the Silicon Valley elites built with blood money from the Central Pacific Railroad.
So when you sit down at the negotiating table with these people, this is who they really are. That realization tells you a few things, but it mainly tells you they simply cannot be trusted in either life choices or in business choices.
Universal has taken a real leadership role in the AI negotiations that has both respected their artists and songwriters and given teeth to the principles of the Human Artistry Campaign. First of all, the company has made it clear that they are going to support their artists and songwriters in having a meaningful seat at the table. They will not send their artists to the charnel house. The only artists who participate will be the artists who decide to participate–opt in rather than Google’s preferred “opt out” structure which relies on the abuse of various safe harbors at scale.
It appears that until such time as both the artists and songwriters and Universal are comfortable with the integrity of the creative and business model of YouTube’s AI music suite of tools, there’s no deal. Negotiations presumably will continue so there may be at least a commercial frameworks.
To that end, here are five points that might prove useful.
There will be many other issues to address, but I think if we don’t address these key points we’ll find ourselves to be artisanal workers scratching out a living for ChatGPT.
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