Most British newspapers yesterday dedicated their fro and original page to support the Campaign for the Protection of the Rights of Differe Works against Artificial Ielligence.
According to Verj, the British governme has recely put forward new laws in the field of artificial ielligence that allows companies operating in the field to use various coe to train their models. More than a thousand British artists and musicians protested in response to the album’s action released the album without sound and called for the change of laws to support the material and spiritual rights of their work.
Artists call for support for their rights against artificial ielligence

British newspapers have also been accompanied by the campaign. The Make IT Fair campaign in the UK has been launched to protect the rights of artificial ielligence and is trying to raise public awareness about the issue. It also urges the British people to support the coury’s creative industries.
The official website of the campaign, which hosted by the NMA Association (NMA), says:
“Technology companies use creative coe, such as news articles, books, music, movies, photos, visual arts and all kinds of creative work to teach their productive artificial ielligence models. Publishers and creators of these works say that this is unfair without proper corol, transparency or payme, and threatens their livelihoods. “

The value of the British creative industry is estimated at $ 5 billion. Critics believe that the British governme’s proposed laws that allow artificial ielligence companies to use artists’ works regardless of their material and spiritual rights can threaten the industry.
The British governme had previously invited all those ierested in the field to share their views on the poteial economic impact of copyright laws. There is still no specific timetable to determine future eves, but the governme said it will use the responses to design the best possible policies in the field of artificial ielligence developme.



