Inside an AI company's copyright defence, and how finance firms can cope with AI regulation

Episode 10,   May 14, 03:58 PM

0'30 Business law news
4'17 Inside an AI company's copyright defence
We look at the arguments being made in a hotly contested court battle between a major media company and a technology company over whether training of the AI system breached copyright law.
6'11 The three main arguments in Stability AI's defence
10'10 The dilemma facing governments: back rights holders or AI developers? They can't have both.

12'48 AI regulation in UK financial services
Financial services are heavily regulated and this will be the case with AI in the future.
13'31 The risks financial services firms need to consider
14'56 companies need to audit their AI use
17'05 the need to work out which individual person is responsible for AI risk in the company
17'34 firms can lean on the processes developed for their movement of operations and systems to the cloud
19'03 there is a growing expectation that senior managers in the UK will be competent to identify and mitigate AI risk.

Cerys Wynn-Davies uses a court filing to analyse how AI companies are defending themselves against huge copyright infringement claims, and Luke Scanlon sets out the steps finance firms need to take to stay on the right side of growing finance-specific AI regulation, ahead of delivering training for financial services senior managers
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