Denmark makes history by granting people copyright to their own facial features and voice in a groundbreaking anti-deepfake law, marking Europe's first legislation of its kind. Meanwhile, prominent authors including Kai Bird and Jia Tolentino sue Microsoft for allegedly using 200,000 pirated books to train their Megatron AI model. These parallel legal battles highlight the growing tension between AI innovation and intellectual property rights. The Danish law could set a precedent for digital identity protection across Europe, while the Microsoft lawsuit joins similar cases against Meta, Anthropic, and OpenAI over unauthorized training data. Both stories signal a new phase of AI regulation where individual rights and creator protections are being reasserted against rapid technological advancement.
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