why aren't we funding this....
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Ooh, you can’t acquire the rights to your face in the app, or the website. You need to book an appointment at the secretary of state and bring at least two people who witnessed your birth.
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You mean the water we polluted with industrial waste.?? That water? Or the metaphorical water that they will use to waterboard us with to force fake confessions??
No they mean my sweet golden nectar. Open up for the pee pee train.
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I for one would like much less copyright law; it really hasn't been good to me.
So you’ve never enjoyed art, music, books, films or TV? Ever?
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Feel like this more than just deepfakes toox would it apply to assholes recording you in public without the person’s consent?
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I'm a twin. Who owns the face? Implicit trust with two sigs required?
Ursula Buffay?
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So you’ve never enjoyed art, music, books, films or TV? Ever?
People made art before copyright.
I think you suggest a fallacy: just because a law is related to a thing, doesn't mean the law makes/helps/enhances the thing.
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No they mean my sweet golden nectar. Open up for the pee pee train.
Ain't no way this was written whilst sober
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IMO, better to get consumer protection laws in place early and refine them over time, than not at all.
The longer these things wait, the more time corpos have to get their influence in and either stop the efforts or water them down to be entirely ineffective.
Edit:
Don't forget to read about it.
https://www.globallawtoday.com/law/legal-news/2025/06/denmarks-groundbreaking-move-copyright-for-faces-and-voices/IMO, better to get laws in place early and refine them over time, than not at all.
So... Move fast and break things?
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Copyright only applies to created works. Wouldn't the owner of the copyright to you be...your parents?
Nah because I'm a transformitive work. My parents didn't make these gainz.
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People made art before copyright.
I think you suggest a fallacy: just because a law is related to a thing, doesn't mean the law makes/helps/enhances the thing.
wrote last edited by [email protected]Before copyright, art was the domain of the rich, the amateur, or those with patronage. Copyright allows artists to make a living from their work.
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Wouldn’t matter, because in America all the big IT companies (Apple, Meta, Amazon etc.) would promptly add a line to their EULAs stating that by using their service, you grant them an irrevocable, transferable lifetime licence to your copyright.
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Wouldn’t matter, because in America all the big IT companies (Apple, Meta, Amazon etc.) would promptly add a line to their EULAs stating that by using their service, you grant them an irrevocable, transferable lifetime licence to your copyright.
Them being forced to include these terms is a win in and of itself, but it still protects people who otherwise had no protections even if they didn't use these services.
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I'm a twin. Who owns the face? Implicit trust with two sigs required?
Technically the rights to your face are as official as any other individual documentation or rights you each had. Does your ID really belong to you? Whats stopping your twin from claiming ownership of it? How does law enforcement go about processing you? These issues have come up before and will again.
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IMO, better to get consumer protection laws in place early and refine them over time, than not at all.
The longer these things wait, the more time corpos have to get their influence in and either stop the efforts or water them down to be entirely ineffective.
Edit:
Don't forget to read about it.
https://www.globallawtoday.com/law/legal-news/2025/06/denmarks-groundbreaking-move-copyright-for-faces-and-voices/wrote last edited by [email protected]I can imagine situations where this is a bad idea, such as making almost all journalism illegal because you don't have to legal right to cover news about an individual.
Hopefully they plan for that.
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Them being forced to include these terms is a win in and of itself, but it still protects people who otherwise had no protections even if they didn't use these services.
I fear it would be a pyrrhic victory at best; all it takes is one instance of acceptance (via smartphone update, or an infinite number of other avenues) for it to propagate to every other entity.
That’s actually before encountering ownership issues of photos, as it usually is the photographer who owns the copyright to an image - and if they upload that photo to a service and agree for it to be trained upon; what happens next?
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I fear it would be a pyrrhic victory at best; all it takes is one instance of acceptance (via smartphone update, or an infinite number of other avenues) for it to propagate to every other entity.
That’s actually before encountering ownership issues of photos, as it usually is the photographer who owns the copyright to an image - and if they upload that photo to a service and agree for it to be trained upon; what happens next?
I think you might be overestimating cooperation between these companies, but it's definitely a valid concern.
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That possibility would interfere with them having surveillance on you everywhere you go. Today every camera you see is now ai linked and it's totally only used to keep you safe citizen /s
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This is a bit weird since normally copyright applies to works that someone has created. Typically they also have to involve creativity. For example, you can't protect a database with copyright, nor can you protect the rules of a game. But, you can protect the text used to explain the rules since that is something creative.
Your voice and body aren't typically seen as creative works. They're just the result of a genetic lottery played by your parents. But, I can vaguely see how you might be able to twist the typical rules to make it count. For example, people decide on hair styles and grooming. They choose their clothing and sometimes make-up. There is a creative process there and their body is the canvas. With that kind of concept of a body being a "creative work", any photograph of that body becomes a derivative work, as would any AI version of that person.
But, this seems like the wrong approach to me. If someone has a copyright on their body, then under typical copyright rules, they can assign their copyright to someone else. Most likely, a model would have to assign the right to her body's copyright to a modelling agency. After she did that, she couldn't even take a selfie because she'd be infringing on the modelling agency's copyright.
Privacy rules make more sense, look at Germany's photographic privacy laws for example.
If the focus is on copyright, then if someone sneaks a camera into a changing room, they can only be charged with copyright violations. If they give the photos away for free, then in many cases the punishment for copyright infringement is minimal. But, if the laws are about protecting privacy, then it doesn't matter if it was a commercial copyright infringement or if it was simply collecting someone's nude photo for personal use. The issue isn't the copyright infringement, it's the privacy violation.
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This is a bit weird since normally copyright applies to works that someone has created. Typically they also have to involve creativity. For example, you can't protect a database with copyright, nor can you protect the rules of a game. But, you can protect the text used to explain the rules since that is something creative.
Your voice and body aren't typically seen as creative works. They're just the result of a genetic lottery played by your parents. But, I can vaguely see how you might be able to twist the typical rules to make it count. For example, people decide on hair styles and grooming. They choose their clothing and sometimes make-up. There is a creative process there and their body is the canvas. With that kind of concept of a body being a "creative work", any photograph of that body becomes a derivative work, as would any AI version of that person.
But, this seems like the wrong approach to me. If someone has a copyright on their body, then under typical copyright rules, they can assign their copyright to someone else. Most likely, a model would have to assign the right to her body's copyright to a modelling agency. After she did that, she couldn't even take a selfie because she'd be infringing on the modelling agency's copyright.
Privacy rules make more sense, look at Germany's photographic privacy laws for example.
If the focus is on copyright, then if someone sneaks a camera into a changing room, they can only be charged with copyright violations. If they give the photos away for free, then in many cases the punishment for copyright infringement is minimal. But, if the laws are about protecting privacy, then it doesn't matter if it was a commercial copyright infringement or if it was simply collecting someone's nude photo for personal use. The issue isn't the copyright infringement, it's the privacy violation.
You don't have to assign the copyright to someone else for them to use it. You can license them to use it.
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You have the right, but will you have the ability when the water starts to pour?
Jokes on them, I sweat so much I basically waterboard myself every time I do yardwork with a mask on.