PIJIP's to host 12th Annual Peter A. Jaszi Distinguished Lecture on Intellectual Property
PIJIP's 12th Annual Peter A. Jaszi Distinguished Lecture on Intellectual Property will be delivered by Professor Matthew Sag from Emory University School of Law. The lecture will focus on Fairness and Fair Use in Generative AI and will take place on September 28th both in person and online.
This PIJIP series is named in recognition of the continuing contributions of Professor Peter A. Jaszi to the study of intellectual property at WCL,聽in the world at large, and in particular for his lasting contributions to the elevation of the public interest in intellectual property discourse.
About the Lecture:
Although we are still a long way from the science fiction version of artificial general intelligence that thinks, feels, and refuses to 鈥渙pen the pod bay doors鈥, recent advances in machine learning and artificial intelligence (鈥淎I鈥) pose profound challenges to copyright law and the fair use doctrine. The challenges posed by generative AI show why, now more than ever, we need a theory of fair use that reflects fundamental copyright principles and eschews considerations of broader social welfare that federal judges are poorly qualified to assess. I argue that expressive substitution is the key to understanding and applying fair use and that this leads to a wide affordance for non-expressive uses of copyrighted works.聽In previous work I have suggested that, in the context of non-expressive use by copy-reliant technology, the absence of direct expressive substitution is all that is required for fair use. Recent developments in generative AI suggest that non-expressive use may not be the be all and end all of fair use, however. In this Article I argue that in addition to considering direct expressive substitution, courts assessing whether training machine learning programs on copyright works is fair use may also consider whether the challenged use undermines the economic incentives that copyright is designed to create.