The University of Oxford response to the UK government consultation on copyright and AI

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Titel: The University of Oxford response to the UK government consultation on copyright and AI
Autoren: Morrison, Christopher, Zisserman, Andrew, Vedaldi, Andrea
Publication Status: Preprint
Verlagsinformationen: University of Oxford, 2025.
Publikationsjahr: 2025
Schlagwörter: Copyright and electronic data processing, Artificial intelligence, Text data mining, Intellectual property, Copyright, Open scholarship, Fair use (Copyright), Copyright licenses, Derivative works (Copyright)
Beschreibung: AI is transforming research, industry, and society. The UK has a chance to be at the forefront of AI development - but only if it creates a copyright framework that supports innovation while ensuring fair recognition for creators. The University of Oxford, a global leader in AI, intellectual property, and digital research, urges the government to rethink its proposed approach. The current legal uncertainty is stifling AI-driven research; however, the government’s proposed opt-out model for text and data mining (TDM) is unworkable - it creates barriers, bureaucracy, and legal risk, driving AI research and investment out of the UK. If the UK wants to lead in AI, it must ensure AI developers, researchers, and rights holders can work within a system that is clear, fair, and globally competitive.
Sprache: English
DOI: 10.5287/ora-gogk6kz0d
Rights: CC BY
Dokumentencode: edsair.doi...........f309215c1c0c381daef4ce5be1a412c7
Datenbank: OpenAIRE
Beschreibung
Abstract:AI is transforming research, industry, and society. The UK has a chance to be at the forefront of AI development - but only if it creates a copyright framework that supports innovation while ensuring fair recognition for creators. The University of Oxford, a global leader in AI, intellectual property, and digital research, urges the government to rethink its proposed approach. The current legal uncertainty is stifling AI-driven research; however, the government’s proposed opt-out model for text and data mining (TDM) is unworkable - it creates barriers, bureaucracy, and legal risk, driving AI research and investment out of the UK. If the UK wants to lead in AI, it must ensure AI developers, researchers, and rights holders can work within a system that is clear, fair, and globally competitive.
DOI:10.5287/ora-gogk6kz0d