“Unlocking Hidden Potential: How AI’s Overlooked Role in Content Creation Could Transform the Future”
In public policy debates, big tech unironically argues, “what about the SMEs?” to justify their own appropriation of content. Simply because a creator devoted their career to creative pursuits by writing books or photographing war zones does not mean they need to financially underwrite Silicon Valley entrepreneurs until the entrepreneurs are big enough to pay bills, or more accurately, given the number of litigations brought to date against AI developers, litigate in lieu of paying them.
Licensing solutions exist that enable companies, large and small, to obtain content and usage rights under flexible terms that account for the relative size of the players in the market. Differentiated market pricing in licensing has existed for centuries and is the norm, not the exception. Academic pricing is different from commercial pricing; for profit pricing is different from non-profit. Applying these concepts to licensing for AI training is neither complex, new nor innovative.
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