Israel launches overnight air raids on Lebanese-Syrian border area
Tel Aviv has continued its aggression against regional nations as it awaits a response to the assassination of top Hezbollah and Hamas leaders
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Tel Aviv has continued its aggression against regional nations as it awaits a response to the assassination of top Hezbollah and Hamas leaders
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Read MoreThe US defence secretary has revoked plea deals with Khalid Sheikh Mohammed and two alleged accomplices.
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Read MoreBEIRUT, Lebanon: A source close to Lebanese militant group Hezbollah said late Friday that Israel carried out strikes on a convoy of trucks entering Lebanon from Syria.
“Three Israeli strikes targeted a convoy of tanker trucks on the Syrian-Lebanese border in the Hawsh el-Sayyed Ali area, injuring one Syrian driver,” the source told AFP.
It was the latest in a series of Israeli strikes in the border area, the source added.
Pentagon announces deployment as tensions build between Iran and Israel after the high-profile Haniyeh assassination.
Read MoreISTANBUL: Turkish Airlines postponed its flights to Iran on Friday night due to tensions between Israel and Iran, Turkiye’s state-owned Anadolu news agency reported, without specifying its source.
It said flights planned to different cities in Iran would resume starting Saturday morning.
Turkish Airlines did not immediately respond to a request for comment on the issue.
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Read MoreWASHINGTON: Reuters denied on Friday that it had reported on imminent preparations for a ballistic missile attack against Israel, after reports circulated on social media citing the news agency as saying this.
“Any claims that Reuters reported imminent preparations for a ballistic attack by Iran, including that satellites and radars have picked up ballistic missiles and drones leaving Iran, Yemen and Iraq toward Israel, or that Turkiye and Iraq have closed their airspace, are false. Reuters did not report this,” a spokesperson said.
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Read MoreIf you’re tired of censorship and dystopian threats against civil liberties, subscribe to Reclaim The Net.
An updated version of what critics refer to as the AI censorship bill, Nurture Originals, Foster Art, and Keep Entertainment Safe Act (NO FAKES Act) has been introduced by senators Chris Coons, a Democrat, and Republican Marsha Blackburn.
The goal of the bill – that first saw the light of day last October as a discussion draft – is to ban what it calls unauthorized digital replicas while providing exemptions for parody, satire, use in documentaries, and other forms of generated content that should fall under the fair use rule.
The entertainment industry is happy with the legislative proposal, with support pouring in from Disney, the Motion Picture Association, Recording Industry Association of America, SAG-AFTRA, agencies, and more.
SAG-AFTRA (Screen Actors Guild), which wants a likeness act at the federal instead of the state level as is the case now, backed the bill, mentioning the need to protect intellectual property and performers’ likenesses and brands.
We obtained a copy of the bill for you here.
But prominent digital rights group, Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF), is unconvinced that these exemptions will work in real life, and fears that the bill, if passed, will result in limiting free speech.
The EFF noted that the House has its own version of the bill, called NO AI FRAUD, whereas Senate’s proposal – which explicitly refers to property rights (not protected by Section 230, and removed from the House bill) – would allow anyone to sue anybody else for creating their “digital replica” – i.e., a new, computer-generated image, voice or visual likeness.
The EFF doesn’t like this definition, calling it “broad,” while the right is given to people (that would be, celebrities), other holders of rights to their likeness, heirs 70 years after their death, but also retroactively, to those who have already died.
That the bill ultimately has to do with money (hence such enthusiasm in the entertainment industry) is one thing – but its potential to at the same time provide another avenue for undermining speech is another.
The EFF sums up one of its misgivings, over the bill’s exemptions, as not being overly meaningful – “if you have to pay a lawyer to figure out if they apply to you, and then try to persuade a rightsholder to agree.”
If you’re tired of censorship and dystopian threats against civil liberties, subscribe to Reclaim The Net.
The post AI Censorship Bill Raises Free Speech Concerns appeared first on Reclaim The Net.
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