Getty Images Offers Protection Against Copyright Suits For AI-Generated Images

Category Artificial Intelligence

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Getty Images has offered protection for its customers against intellectual-property disputes with its AI-generated model. It has also announced a Spotify-style compensation model for creatives. The system is trained on Getty’s image library, so does not include imagery of real people or places that could be manipulated into deepfake imagery.


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Getty Images is so confident its new generative AI model is free of copyrighted content that it will cover any potential intellectual-property disputes for its customers. The generative AI system, announced today, was built by Nvidia and is trained solely on images in Getty’s image library. It does not include logos or images that have been scraped off the internet without consent.

"Fundamentally, it’s trained; it’s clean. It’s viable for businesses to use. We’ll stand behind that claim," says Craig Peters, the CEO of Getty Images. Peters says companies that want to use generative AI want total legal certainty they won’t face expensive copyright lawsuits.

Adobe has recently launched Firefly to create copyright-free content for AI systems

The past year has seen a boom in generative AI systems that produce images and text. But AI companies are embroiled in numerous legal battles over copyrighted content. Prominent artists and authors—most recently John Grisham, Jodi Picoult, and George R.R. Martin—have sued AI companies such as OpenAI and Stability AI for copyright infringement. Earlier this year, Getty Images announced it was suing Stability AI for using millions of its images, without permission, to train its open-source image-generation AI Stable Diffusion.The legal challenges have sparked many attempts by others to benefit from generative AI while also protecting intellectual property. Adobe recently launched Firefly, which it claims is similarly trained on copyright-free content. Shutterstock has said it is planning on reimbursing artists whose works have been sold to AI companies to train models. Microsoft recently announced it will also foot any copyright legal bills for clients using its text-based generative models.

Shutterstock plans on reimbursing artists whose works have been sold to AI companies to train models

Peters says that the creators of the images—and any people that appear in them—have consented to having their art used in the AI model. Getty is also offering a Spotify-style compensation model to creatives for the use of their work.The fact that creatives will be compensated in this way is good news, says Jia Wang, an assistant professor at Durham University in the UK, who specializes in AI and intellectual-property law. But it might be tricky to determine which images have been used in generated AI images in order to determine who should be compensated for what, she adds.

Microsoft will also foot any copyright legal bills for clients using its text-based generative models

Getty’s model is only trained on the firm’s creative content, so it does not include imagery of real people or places that could be manipulated into deepfake imagery.

As an example, Peters types in a prompt for the president of the United States, and the AI model generates images of men and women of different ethnicities in suits and in front of the American flag.

"I think there are some really sincere people that are actually being thoughtful about this," he says. "But I also think there’s some hooligans that just want to go for that gold rush." .

Getty is offering a Spotify-style compensation model to creatives for the use of their work

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