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Andres Guadamuz

“The Language Models delved too greedily and too deeply...”
Artificial intelligence

To delve or not to delve: AI detection made easy?

There’s growing controversy online about the use of the word “delve” as an easy detector of whether a text has been written by an AI. I have to admit that I’m personally sad to see the word “delve” go, I realised that I used it regularly, even before AI (hey, Read more

By Andres Guadamuz, 2 years ago April 11, 2024
Social media

The end of the online mob and the end of shared reality

I have to admit that I have always been a realist, yet, when it comes to technology, I tend to side with the enthusiastic optimists. For many years, I shared the illusion (and perhaps common delusion) that the Internet was a force for good in the world, believing it would Read more

By Andres Guadamuz, 2 years ago April 6, 2024
Popular Culture

Forgotten Dystopias: The Godlike AI That Time Forgot

If I were to ask you about a film depiction of artificial intelligence, there are quite a few candidates that would pop into one’s head. My mind tends to immediately jump to some classics, such as HAL 9000 in “2001: A Space Odyssey”. Another popular one is Skynet, and therefore Read more

By Andres Guadamuz, 2 years ago September 21, 2025
Artificial intelligence

The EU AI Act and copyright

The European Parliament has approved the AI Act (voted version here), setting in motion its publication in the official journal in the next few months (given further edits). While full implementation will take place between 2025 and 2026, we will start seeing its effects sooner rather than later as AI Read more

By Andres Guadamuz, 2 years ago March 19, 2024
Artificial intelligence

VCRs, tape recorders, and AI

The AI copyright infringement cases are increasing rapidly, not only in the US but also in the UK and China. The number of cases is so high that it’s impossible to keep track of all of them, but some common elements are emerging for analysis. While the emphasis has so Read more

By Andres Guadamuz, 2 years ago August 21, 2024
Artificial intelligence

Do you own your voice? The challenges of voice cloning

A couple of weeks ago I was discussing in class how some comedians cloned George Carlin‘s voice, and the subsequent lawsuit by his estate. I won’t go into any details, Aaron Moss has written the best analysis of the merits of the case, but suffice it to say that it Read more

By Andres Guadamuz, 2 years ago February 26, 2024
Metaverse

Barcelona court rules in favour of defendant in NFT metaverse copyright case

A Commercial Court in Barcelona has made a ruling in a novel copyright dispute between fashion shop Mango and the Spanish collective society for artists VEGAP (text of the decision in Spanish here). The dispute involves the adaptation of a number of works by prominent Spanish artists into garments displayed Read more

By Andres Guadamuz, 2 years ago February 7, 2024
Games

Palworld, Pokémon, and copyright infringement

A game called Palworld is taking the world by storm. This title has garnered 8 million downloads on Steam in less than 6 days, it also has become the second game in Steam history to hit over 2 million concurrent players. The game is a monster-collection-base-defence-crafting mash-up, you catch creatures Read more

By Andres Guadamuz, 2 years ago September 19, 2024
Artificial intelligence

The New York Times lawsuit: the case and its wider implications

The New York Times has joined the AI Wars by suing OpenAI and Microsoft (complaint here). The case was filed while I was on my yearly holiday, so I am late to the party. Quite a lot has already been written on the subject by various parties. Depending on whom Read more

By Andres Guadamuz, 2 years ago November 28, 2025
Artificial intelligence

Chinese court declares that AI-generated image has copyright

The copyright law world has been abuzz last week with news that a court in the People’s Republic of China decided that a work generated with Stable Diffusion had copyright, and therefore the author could sue for copyright infringement. The case is Li v Liu (page with full verdict here), Read more

By Andres Guadamuz, 2 years ago January 16, 2024

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TechnoLlama by Andres Guadamuz is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International License.

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