President Trump announced that the position of the United States on intellectual and artificial ownership would be a “tasty application” that does not force AI companies to pay for each piece of copyright protected material used in training models. “You can’t expect you to have a successful AI program when every article, book or anything else you read or studied, you should pay,” said Trump. “We appreciate it, but we just can’t do it – because it is not feasible.”
The president also doubled his rhetoric with an anti -grain in his speech. “We get rid of wake up,” he said on Wednesday. “Americans do not want to wake up Marxist madness in AI models.”
Notes appeared during a speech at the top hosted by All-in Podcast and forum Hill & Valley. The White House AI and Crypto, the spell of David Sacks, one of the co -stress of podcasts, played a key role in shaping the Trump administration approach to artificial intelligence policy.
Those who want AI to train work -protected work without licensing material, celebrate Trump’s attention. “He is absolutely right,” says Adam Eisgrau, senior director in the House of Progress. “Common sense requires that you require gene developers a license for copyright protected by copyright, in which they are trained, it is not feasible, and it does not make sense, because these works are not plagiarized. They are used, as a person, to learn and create amazing technology that two federal courts have already said that it is” spectacularly transformed. “
In the broadly ending AI action plan published this morning, Trump’s administration outlined over 90 policy recommendations to ensure that the United States wins what Sacks calls the “AI race” against China.
The 28-page report emphasizes that “AI is definitely too significant to suppress bureaucracy at this early stage” and recommends rules to relax the regulations and withdraw the handrails from the biden era, including the review of the Federal Trade Commission “to make sure that they will not develop the theory of responsibility that excessively burdened AI innovation.” He also recommends suspending federal funds from states that introduce too “burdensome” AI regulations. Limiting state efforts to regulate AI was one of the PET bags projects. This recommendation will take place after an attempt to resolution of federal law requiring a decade “moratorium AI” regarding state provisions that failed at the end of last month.
In addition to issuing recommendations for loosening the regulations, the AI action plan also doubles the contempt of Trump’s administration for AI’s “Woke”. It recommends updating federal order guidelines so that only AI companies, which “ensure that their systems are objective and ideological free from top -down bias,” received government agreements.
In particular, the AI action plan does not mention intellectual properties. Trump’s comments on this evening offer an unprecedented insight into the preferred approach of the White House to regulate artificial intelligence and copyright.
This is a developing story. Check the update.
