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Artificial Intelligence and the Media: Reconsidering Rights and Responsibilities

Edited by: Taina Pihlajarinne, Anette Katariina Alén-Savikko

ISBN13: 9781839109966
Published: February 2022
Publisher: Edward Elgar Publishing Limited
Country of Publication: UK
Format: Hardback
Price: £109.00



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This timely book presents a detailed analysis of the role of law and regulation in the utilisation of Artificial Intelligence (AI) in the media sector. As well as contributing to the wider discussion on law and AI, the book also digs deeper by exploring pressing issues at the intersections of AI, media, and the law. Chapters critically re-examine various rights and responsibilities from the perspectives of incentives for accountable utilisation of AI in the industry.

Featuring chapters from leading scholars in the field, Artificial Intelligence and the Media provides a timely and in-depth research-based contribution to complex themes – especially at the interface of new technology (including AI) with media and regulation. Analysing both legislative and ethical solutions, chapters explore what “AI” and “accountability” mean in terms of media practices, principles, and power relations, as well as how to address the AI revolution with informed law and policy in order to incentivise accountable utilisation of AI and to reduce negative societal impacts.

Offering ideas for further research in the area, this book will be key reading for academics and researchers in the fields of information and media law, regulation, and technology law. It may also interest media law practitioners with research-based guidance for everyday practices and tools to prepare for future developments in the area.

Subjects:
IT, Internet and Artificial Intelligence Law
Contents:
Introduction to Artificial Intelligence and the Media
Taina Pihlajarinne and Anette Alén-Savikko
PART I. JOURNALISTIC PRINCIPLES AND ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE
1. Bias, journalistic endeavours, and the risks of artificial intelligence
M.R. Leiser
2. Transparency in algorithmic journalism: from ethics to law and back
Anette Alén-Savikko
3. The journalistic exemption in personal data processing
Päivi Korpisaari
PART II. TRUST, DISINFORMATION AND PLATFORMS
4. Social media platforms as public trustees: an approach to the disinformation problem
Philip M. Napoli and Fabienne Graf
5. Artificial intelligence is not a panacea: policing content on social media platforms, three dilemmas and their ethical and legal implications
Jingrong Tong
6. The commercial unfairness of recommender systems on social media
Catalina Goanta and Gerasimos Spanakis
PART III. REMITS AND LIMITS OF EXCLUSIVE RIGHTS
7. Creations caused by humans (or robots)? Artificial intelligence and causation requirements for copyright
protection in EU law
Ole-Andreas Rognstad
8. Artificial intelligence and intellectual property rights: the quest or plea for artificial intelligence as a legal subject
Rosa Maria Ballardini and Robert van den Hoven van Genderen
9. The European copyright system as a suitable incentive for AI-based journalism?
Taina Pihlajarinne, Alexander Thesleff, Leo Leppänen and Sini Valmari
10. Press publishers’ right and artificial intelligence
Juha Vesala
11. Access to data for training algorithms in machine learning: copyright law and ‘right-stacking’
Inger B. Ørstavik

Conclusions on Artificial Intelligence and the Media
Taina Pihlajarinne and Anette Alén-Savikko

Index