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New AI systems collide with copyright law
(www.bbc.co.uk)
This is a most excellent place for technology news and articles.
Couple of things here - what do you do with the open source models already published? There's terabytes of data encapsulated in those. Some have published corpora, some don't. How do you plan to determine that a work comes from an unregistered AI?
Also, with respect to "within the country" - VPNs exist. TOR exists. SD cards exist. What's your plan to control the flow of trained models without violating civil rights?
This is a teflon slope covered in oil. (IMO)
If they don't publish what their training data is, they should be considered violating copyright. The world governments can block sites if they want. It's hard to swat down all of the random wikis and such but major AI competitors wouldn't be a big problem.
"Innocent until proven guilty" is a rather important foundation for most justice systems. You're proposing the exact opposite.