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Pris: 1550 SEK exkl. moms  | The rise of artificial intelligence (AI) is reshaping the very foundations of copyright law.
As AI systems grow more powerful – capable of producing images, text, music, and other forms of creative expression – they challenge long-established ideas of authorship, ownership, and copyright. Around the world, legal experts and policymakers are grappling with fundamental questions:
- Who owns the rights to AI-generated works?
- What material can be used to train AI systems?
- How should publicly available online content be treated when used by AI?
- Can the products of AI be freely used – or even legally protected?
This book explores these pressing issues in depth, offering a clear overview of how copyright laws and regulations are evolving in practice across the EU, Canada, the United States, Asia, and South America.
A must-read for legal professionals, policymakers, creators, and anyone seeking to understand how AI is rewriting the rules of copyright law.
Table Of Contents
About the Contributors
Foreword
Lorenza Ferrari Hofer, President of AIPPI
A Comparative Global Overview
Sanna Wolk and Guillaume Henry
Chapter 1 Belgium
Maarten Herbosch, Sarah van den Brande and Bernard Vanbrabant
Chapter 2 Brazil
Leticia Provedel and Luiza Alkaim
Chapter 3 Canada
Brian W. Gray
Chapter 4 China
Allen (Jun) Wang and Gao Cheng
Chapter 5 Finland
Elisa Huusko
Chapter 6 France
Stefan Naumann
Chapter 7 Germany
Alexandra Wachtel and Athina Theodoridis
Chapter 8 Hong Kong
Ian Liu
Chapter 9 India
Neel Mason
Chapter 10 Paraguay
Aldo Fabrizio Modica
Chapter 11 Poland
Martyna Czapska
Chapter 12 Sweden
Malin Ekstrand and Sofia Sars
Chapter 13 Switzerland
Raphael Zingg
Chapter 14 United Arab Emirates
Divyendu Verma and Sarmad Hasan Manto
Chapter 15 United Kingdom
Ellen Keenan O’Malley
Chapter 16 United States of America
Linda Lecomte and Hailey Bureau | |
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