OECD Develops Frameworks for Trustworthy AI Governance
The OECD is creating frameworks to promote Trustworthy AI, focusing on accountability, data management, and privacy to ensure responsible use and mitigate risks associated with generative AI.
The OECD is creating frameworks to promote Trustworthy AI, focusing on accountability, data management, and privacy to ensure responsible use and mitigate risks associated with generative AI.
Ross Intelligence is appealing a court ruling that found its use of Westlaw headnotes for AI training constitutes copyright infringement, raising significant questions about fair use and originality under copyright law in the context of artificial intelligence.
As AI systems increasingly integrate into various industries, legal complexities surrounding liability, regulation, and safety emerge, with courts examining whether AI should be classified as a product or service under existing liability laws, while recent litigation highlights issues of design defects, negligence, and data privacy.
The California Civil Rights Council has finalized regulations on automated decision-making systems in employment, coinciding with the introduction of the “No Robo Bosses Act” by State Senator Jerry McNerney, which mandates human oversight and addresses bias in AI-driven employment decisions.
The Chartered Institute of Arbitrators has published the “Guideline on the Use of AI in Arbitration (2025)” to address the integration of AI technologies in arbitration, emphasizing the need for transparency, accountability, and independent verification to maintain procedural integrity amidst concerns over accuracy and data security.
OpenAI and Microsoft are embroiled in multiple copyright lawsuits consolidated under Judge Sidney H. Stein in the Southern District of New York, primarily concerning allegations of unauthorized use of copyrighted content in the development of AI technologies like ChatGPT, with significant implications for the news industry and copyright law.