How an AI-written book shows why the tech 'terrifies' creatives

Published On Jan 30, 2025, 7:02 PM

The article discusses the rise of AI-generated content, particularly focused on personalized books created using generative AI. Zoe Kleinman received an AI-written book as a gift, triggering a discussion about the implications of such technologies on creative industries and copyright concerns. Many creators express fears that their works are exploited without consent to train AI models. The UK government is deliberating changes to copyright law regarding AI, sparking significant debate about the balance between innovation and protecting intellectual property rights. The regulatory landscape is changing, with new players like DeepSeek emerging in the AI market, raising concerns over US dominance in this sector.

Stock Forecasts

MSFT

Positive

With increasing public interest and regulatory focus on AI technologies, companies like BookByAnyone that offer AI-generated personalized products could see a boost in attention and sales. However, the market reaction may vary depending on how regulatory frameworks evolve.

Related News

SoftBank would contribute as much as $25 billion to OpenAI's funding round and become the largest investor.

Investors are combing the first batch of Big Tech earnings as they wait for Apple to report.

AAPL
TSLA
MSFT
META

Days after Chinese upstart DeepSeek revealed a breakthrough in cheap AI computing that shook the U.S. technology industry, the chief executives of Microsoft and Meta defended massive spending that they said was key to staying competitive in the new field. "Investing 'very heavily' in capital expenditure and infrastructure is going to be a strategic advantage over time," Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg said on a post-earnings call. Satya Nadella, CEO of Microsoft, said the spending was needed to overcome the capacity constraints that have hampered the technology giant's ability to capitalize on AI.

MSFT
META