Angela Yang is a culture and trends reporter for NBC News.
A new Senate bill aims to make it easier for human creators to find out if their work was used without permission to train artificial intelligence, marking the latest effort to tackle the lack of transparency in generative AI development. The Transparency and Responsibility for Artificial Intelligence Networks Act would enable copyright holders to subpoena training records of generative AI models, if the holder can declare a “good faith belief” that their work was used to train the model.
In recent years, news outlets like The New York Times and The Wall Street Journal sued AI companies such as OpenAI and Perplexity AI for copyright infringement. And the world’s biggest record labels teamed up in June to take two prominent AI music-making companies to court, alleging that they trained their models on decades’ worth of copyrighted sound recordings without consent.
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