The album, Is This What We Want?, is released in protest as the British government weighs changes to copyright and AI policies.
With contributions from artists including Kate Bush, Annie Lennox, Cat Stevens and Damon Albarn, the album was released Tuesday to protest proposed British changes to artificial intelligence laws that artists fear will erode their creative control.
With contributions from artists including Kate Bush, Annie Lennox, Cat Stevens and Damon Albarn, the album was released Tuesday to protest proposed British changes to artificial intelligence laws
As creators protest their works being used to train AI models, tech companies face scrutiny. The future of AI training hangs in the balance.
More than 1,000 musicians, including Kate Bush, Annie Lennox, and Damon Albarn, have united to release a silent album in protest against proposed changes to copyright law concerning artificial intelligence (AI).
More than 1,000 musicians - including Annie Lennox, Damon Albarn and Kate Bush - released a silent album on Tuesday in protest at the UK government’s planned changes to copyright law, which they say w
According to a statement from the Department for Science, Innovation and Technology (DSIT), the UK's "current regime for copyright and AI is holding back the creative industries, media and AI sector from realising their full potential – and that cannot continue".
Kate Bush, Annie Lennox and Damon Albarn are among more than 1,000 musicians who have come together to record a silent album in protest at proposed changes to copyright law around artificial intelligence (AI).
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