OECD report looks at intellectual property impacts from AI data scraping

14/02/2025 | OECD

A new report from the Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development's (OECD) Global Partnership on AI (GPAI) studies the practices that organisations are using to collect and use data to train artificial intelligence (AI) systems and its implications on intellectual property (IP). In particular, the study focused on data scraping and its impact on a range of stakeholders in the AI ecosystem, including content creators and other rights holders; research institutions and academia; AI data aggregators; AI developers; and technology companies. The report proposes several policy approaches to address the identified challenges, from a voluntary code of conduct to standard technical solutions and contractual terms. 

Read Full Story
Copyright, Intellectual property, IP

What is this page?

You are reading a summary article on the Privacy Newsfeed, a free resource for DPOs and other professionals with privacy or data protection responsibilities helping them stay informed of industry news all in one place. The information here is a brief snippet relating to a single piece of original content or several articles about a common topic or thread. The main contributor is listed in the top left-hand corner, just beneath the article title.

The Privacy Newsfeed monitors over 300 global publications, of which more than 5,750 summary articles have been posted to the online archive dating back to the beginning of 2020. A weekly roundup is available by email every Friday.

Freevacy has been shortlisted in the Best Educator category.
The PICCASO Privacy Awards recognise the people making an outstanding contribution to this dynamic and fast-growing sector.