NETIZEN KANE: THE DEATH OF JOURNALISM, COPYRIGHT AND AI

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NETIZEN KANE: THE DEATH OF JOURNALISM, COPYRIGHT AND AI
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NETIZEN KANE: THE DEATH OF JOURNALISM, COPYRIGHT AND AI
CHRISTOPHER JAMES LEVER – THE UNIVERSITY OF EDINBURGH
 
Good Afternoon. My name is Christopher James Lever. Chris Lever used to write for some rather interesting fanzines, before he embarked upon an academic career, and also had his privacy invaded by Google. It’s a great pleasure to welcome the good ship Gikii on her voyage home. My presentation is entitled: ‘Netizen Kane: The Death of Journalism, Copyright & Artificial Intelligence’. It proposes the development of a hypothetical text-based copyright infringement detection platform designed to work on distributed networks, with a view to ameliorating the much lauded death of journalism. Instead of offering an affirmative solution to the problem at hand, it highlights pertinent areas for future consideration and identifies potential legal and technological pitfalls. There is so much I could possibly mention in this presentation that there will certainly be glaring omissions. Nonetheless, I really want a forum to subject it to further discussion, and could not think of a better one than Gikii.  After Hugh’s excellent paper it became apparent that I needed to enliven my presentation with a narrative. I have therefore chosen to align my presentation with Orson Welles’ classic story of power and the press: Citizen Kane.           
 
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