argument: Notizie/News - Intellectual Property Law
WinBuzzer reports that Johns Hopkins University Press (JHUP) faces backlash after announcing plans to license its extensive catalog for training artificial intelligence models. Authors and academics say they were not consulted and argue that licensing their books without consent violates their intellectual property and undermines academic integrity.
The controversy has sparked a wider debate about the legal and ethical implications of using copyrighted books to train generative AI systems. Authors are demanding transparency, consent and compensation, warning that their work could be devalued and used to build systems that may one day replace them. Observers view the JHUP dispute as a pivotal case that could shape how publishers navigate copyright law amid the growing data demands of AI development.