Daily LInks
1. Asian garment makers call for more help from brands to adapt as Europe calls time on fast fashion. The framework proposes that by 2030, all companies selling textiles – clothes, mattresses, car upholsteries, and the like – will have to meet certain standards in order to sell their wares to customers in the EU. – Read More on Reuters
2. Google and YouTube are trying to have it both ways with AI and copyright. There’s really only one solution that the music industry — especially UMG — is going to accept here, and it’s not toothless AI councils. It’s creating a new royalty system for using artists’ voices that does not exist in current copyright law. – Read More on the Verge
3. Deepfake Imposter Scams Are Driving a New Wave of Fraud. Cloning a person’s voice is increasingly easy. Once a scammer downloads a short sample from an audio clip from someone’s social media or voicemail message—it can be as short as 30 seconds—they can use AI voice-synthesizing tools readily available online to create the content they need. – Read More on Yahoo
4. RETRO READ: How Do You Solve a Problem Like Deepfakes? The deepfake video of Kardashian “transforms [the original] substantially.” More than that, a potential fair use argument is bolstered by the fact that the less-than one minute-long deepfake video makes use of only a small portion of Vogue’s 11 minute version, and does not serve “as a replacement for the original video.” – Read More on TFL
5. Luxury goods demand is normalizing: Rolls-Royce Motor Cars CEO. “The very exuberant demand patterns for luxury goods that we have all seen right after the pandemic are normalizing. And that is not only true for the U.S. States, but also for Europe, for Asia.” – Read More on Yahoo
6. How ChatGPT turned generative AI into an “anything tool.” Until recently, AI models were specialized tools. Using AI in a particular area, like robotics, meant spending time and money creating AI models specifically and only for that area. – Read More on arstechnica