More than 400 British Artists appeal against the reforms of the Copyright Act – with Dua Lipa and Elton John

The petition is linked to the planned change in law, where artificial intelligence companies can use copyrighted material without permission, unless the copyright holder specifically prohibits use.

Britain A number of front -line artists appeal to the country’s administration to better protect their production from becoming artificial intelligence material.

More than four hundred artists and institutions have signed to the country’s prime minister For Keir Starmer a addressed letter that requires that their production should not be legalized for free use of artificial intelligence companies.

The petition is linked to the planned change in law, where artificial intelligence companies can use copyrighted material without permission, unless the copyright holder specifically prohibits use. However, there is no more detailed information on how the prohibition process works exactly, says the British magazine The Guardian.

The British Broadcasting Company also tells about this BBC.

Letter Among the signatories include Two lipa, Paul McCartney, Elton JohnColdplay, National Theater and News Media Association.

The signatories urge the country’s administration to accept a change in the law, which would allow artificial intelligence companies to inform copyright holders about what individual work has been used by their models.

Parliament’s Upper House will vote on the change on Monday, but in advance, the administration has been reluctant to change, says The Guardian.

In the petition, the artists emphasize that their intervention income is threatened if the changes are realized and artificial intelligence companies could use their work without permission. In addition, they emphasized that the changes would threaten the position of Britain as the leading creative art producer in the future.

“We urge you to vote for British creative areas,” the letter states.

Letter It is not the first time that artists protest changes planned for copyright law. More than a thousand British artists were involved in the release of the late February Is This What We Want album (freely translated this is what we want). The 12 songs of the album included silence and recordings made of empty recording studios and performances.

By Editor

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