New York Times sues AI — theneurondaily.com
In Hollywood, writers and actors/actresses are on strike due to AI-related items.
From DSC:
And while some are asking about other industries’/individuals’ data, Bryan Alexander asks this about academics:
- Will academics try to protect their content from AI? — from aiandacademia.substack.com by Bryan Alexander
While I’m here, also see Bryan’s posting –> How colleges and university are responding to AI now
AI’s Coming Constitutional Convention — from thebrainyacts.beehiiv.com
For centuries, constitutional conventions have been pivotal moments in history for codifying the rights and responsibilities that shape civilized societies. As artificial intelligence rapidly grows more powerful, the AI community faces a similar historic inflection point. The time has come to draft a “Constitutional Convention for AI” – to proactively encode principles that will steer these transformative technologies toward justice, empowerment, and human flourishing.
AI promises immense benefits, from curing diseases to unlocking clean energy. But uncontrolled, it poses existential dangers that could undermine human autonomy and dignity. Lawyers understand well that mere regulations or oversight are no match for a determined bad actor. Fundamental principles must be woven into the very fabric of the system.