Google Cloud’s AI Technologies And Copyright Infringement
Prosecuted For Copyright Infringement?
If a customer employing Google Cloud’s AI technologies is ever prosecuted for copyright infringement, Google has promised to foot the bill. Google, however, has said that this safeguard is rendered useless if a client actively seeks to violate intellectual property rights.
If a business customer is sued because it utilized an AI model trained on Google material that was protected by intellectual property rights, or if the client’s use of Google’s AI tools led to a product that infringed on someone else’s rights, Google’s cloud division has announced it would cover both sorts of claims.
Businesses that are interested in using generative AI face more than just copyright concerns. Other issues include hallucinations, which occur when AI algorithms invent data or make mistakes appear plausible; prejudice; cybersecurity threats; high costs; complicated models; and a shortage of AI professionals.
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Where Are Your Technologies Safe?
Workspace (Google Docs, Gmail, Slides, and Meet); and Google Cloud are all safe, including the AI assistant Duet AI, which can do things like draft emails or add graphics to invites.
Search, chat, text embedding API or multimodal embeddings, visual captioning (Vertex AI’s Visual Q&A), and the Codey APIs are all included, as is Vertex AI, an AI platform that provides MLOps tools to manage machine learning projects.
Similar announcements were made by Microsoft and Adobe before to this one. Microsoft promised last month that it would defend any business that used its AI Copilot tool and was subsequently sued for copyright infringement. Even before the publication of Firefly, Adobe had implemented comparable safeguards for its stock photos. Bloomberg reports that the company is expanding the service to include computer-generated pictures.
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