色色研究所

色色研究所

Bellini College of Artificial Intelligence, Cybersecurity and Computing

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Professor John Licato Interviewed by Computerworld

licato

Dr. John Licato (CSE, assistant professor) was interviewed by , an online magazine, about concerns raised over OpenAI's . A key statement under fire seems to indicate their position is that GenAI is valuable enough to society to warrant special provisions in copyright law.

Because copyright today covers virtually every sort of human expression including blog posts, photographs, forum posts, scraps of software code, and government documents it would be impossible to train todays leading AI models without using copyrighted materials, said OpenAI.

A range of lawsuits have been filed in multiple countries over what many assert is OpenAIs unlawful use of web-scraping, the automation of copying data from websites. OpenAI states it has made efforts to allow creators to opt out of letting the models train on their work, but that seems to start with the assumption that copyrighted material was and remains fair use for them. This raises the fair question: what are some alternative methods of training AI without copyrighted material?

To find out about Dr. John Licato's view on this topic please see the full article on Computerworld, .

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About Bellini College of Artificial Intelligence, Cybersecurity and Computing News

Established in 2024, the Bellini College of AI, Cybersecurity and Computing is the first of its kind in Florida and one of the pioneers in the nation to bring together the disciplines of artificial intelligence, cybersecurity and computing into a dedicated college. We aim to position Florida as a global leader and economic engine in AI, cybersecurity and computing education and research. We foster interdisciplinary innovation and ethical technology development through strong industry and government partnerships.