Does Creative Commons Still Have Teeth in the AI Era?

CC Signals to help copyright owners express how they prefer their work used by AI
When Creative Commons (CC) introduced its suite of open content licenses two decades ago, it changed how creators shared their work online. CC licenses offered a clear, permissive framework: share freely, remix legally, and credit responsibly. That model helped build the digital commons we rely on today. But the explosion of AI (specifically, large models trained on massive swaths of public content) has shaken things up. This week, CC announced CC Signals, a framework designed to help content stewards and data holders express how they want their works used in AI training. The aim is not to restrict AI, but to redefine the norms governing it, building a new social contract for machines that mirrors the reciprocity and openness that CC licenses originally fostered. A Framework for AI-E
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Picture of Mukundan Sivaraj
Mukundan Sivaraj
Mukundan covers the AI startup ecosystem for AIM Media House. Reach out to him at mukundan.sivaraj@aimmediahouse.com.
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