argument: Notizie/News - Intellectual Property Law
Source: ElectronLibre
ElectronLibre provides an exclusive look at the text of a new bill introduced in the French parliament on December 16, 2025, aimed at regulating the exploitation of cultural content by artificial intelligence providers. The proposed legislation seeks to establish a mandatory transparency regime, requiring AI developers to disclose detailed summaries of the copyrighted works used to train their models. This move is designed to make the existing "opt-out" provisions of European copyright law practically enforceable for authors, musicians, and publishers who currently struggle to prove their works were ingested by black-box algorithms.
Additionally, the bill proposes a remuneration mechanism for the reuse of cultural works by generative AI, potentially introducing a statutory license or a collective management system similar to those used in the music industry. The text argues that the "text and data mining" exceptions were never intended to cover the generation of competing synthetic content. By imposing these strict requirements, France aims to position itself as a defender of human creativity and cultural sovereignty, challenging the practices of major international tech companies that rely on scraping vast amounts of data without direct compensation to creators.