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Aspiring Lawyers - Interviews & Vacation Schemes
Commercial Awareness Discussion
confused to commercially aware! trying to develop my commercial awareness
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<blockquote data-quote="confusedlawstudent" data-source="post: 124064" data-attributes="member: 17277"><p>That definitely makes it a lot clearer! Thanks so much!</p><p></p><p>So I couldn't think of anything as to how law firms would advise clients in relation to the Netflix story I mentioned above. </p><p></p><p>But I did read an article a few weeks ago about Shutterstock's partnership with OpenAI to use artificial intelligence to provide a text to image service for its customers. This might trigger a lot of copyright issues - most importantly, the potential copyright infringement of the images used to train the AI. So I suppose law firms would have to warn Shutterstock of this? Or advise them on how to train the AI to avoid infringement? There might also be employment law issues if the use of AI results in many people's jobs becoming redundant. </p><p></p><p>Am I on the right lines?</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="confusedlawstudent, post: 124064, member: 17277"] That definitely makes it a lot clearer! Thanks so much! So I couldn't think of anything as to how law firms would advise clients in relation to the Netflix story I mentioned above. But I did read an article a few weeks ago about Shutterstock's partnership with OpenAI to use artificial intelligence to provide a text to image service for its customers. This might trigger a lot of copyright issues - most importantly, the potential copyright infringement of the images used to train the AI. So I suppose law firms would have to warn Shutterstock of this? Or advise them on how to train the AI to avoid infringement? There might also be employment law issues if the use of AI results in many people's jobs becoming redundant. Am I on the right lines? [/QUOTE]
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Commercial Awareness Discussion
confused to commercially aware! trying to develop my commercial awareness
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