Abstract

This article explores emerging issues surrounding artificial intelligence (AI) and copyright through a two-pronged approach. First, it provides an extensive literature review analyzing government and industry strategies for addressing AI copyright concerns and evaluates their rationality. Second, it details experiments conducted using neural networks to examine relevant information and investigate image copyright challenges, assessing mainstream large language models’ efficacy in handling copyright matters.
 The literature review explores AI copyright perspectives of the United Kingdom, China, the European Union, and the United States. It finds that countries emphasize balanced regulation and innovation (UK), ethical content creation (China), regulating high-risk applications (EU), or principles like non-discrimination and privacy (US). However, comprehensive governance frameworks are needed to navigate AI’s ethical, social, and legal intricacies.
 The experimental portion trains a convolutional neural network on a dataset of 41 infringing and non-infringing image sets to identify copyright infringement. While achieving over 80% accuracy, enhancements through expanded training data, segmentation, and multi-domain detection could improve generalization. The paper concludes with an analysis advocating copyright adaptation for AI creations, measured protections for standalone AI works, and constructive policies from interdisciplinary dialogue.

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