Without protective laws, solon warns of AI threat to multimedia artists

Salceda made the statement following an article released today by The New York Times about the dangers posed by artificial intelligence, as articulated in the thoughts of scientist Geoffrey Hinton, who worked on the technology for more than 25 years.
Gerd Altmann/CC0

MANILA, Philippines — The Filipino multimedia sector could be in danger of downfall without intellectual property laws protecting it especially with the rise of artificial intelligence.

House Ways and Means chair Joey Sarte Salceda (Albay, 2nd district) warned that without “strong, immediate, and responsive” protections in the country for multimedia artists, such as site blocking powers for IP authorities, artificial intelligence “could kill the Filipino multimedia sector.”

Salceda made the statement following an article by The New York Times about the dangers posed by artificial intelligence, as articulated in the thoughts of scientist Geoffrey Hinton, who worked on the technology for more than 25 years.

“The labor displacement issue is very valid. It will definitely make many jobs obsolete. Quick copywriting would be one of the first to fall. Videos made by AI are also emerging, and soon enough, they will be close to real. But you will notice that AI ultimately relies on source material as basis for the ‘art’ it generates. So, theoretically, we should be able to take legal action on those who use AI-generated material if it infringes on original copyrighted material,” Hinton said in the article published by the New York Times.

“What AI appears to do right now is alter original content, but in essence, it still depends on original source material. With these AI-generated multimedia materials all over the internet, you do need a quick response mechanism. That’s why site blocking is as important as copyright protection. No enforcement, no ownership. You cannot own what you cannot protect. And you will not create if you cannot own,” he added.

Passage of legislation to address online infringement sought

Salceda said that the key feature of House Bill No. 7600, which amends the Intellectual Property Code of the Philippines, is that “it allows the Intellectual Property Office to respond quickly to online infringement through a proper process of petitioning for the blocking of a website that contains infringed material.”

Salceda is the principal author of House Bill No. 7600, which was already approved by the Committee on Trade and Industry.

“I think we will approve it on the floor before the 2nd SONA of PBBM. We have time,” Salceda said.

Salceda also wants the IPOPHIL to develop a protocol “for doing site blocking if it is posted on a microsite or a social media account, since, of course, you can’t block the whole site in such cases.”

“We will continue to engage the IPOPHIL and the Department of Information and Communication Technology to see how we can operationalize these new powers,” Salceda said.

“I’m not against AI. Like any technology, it has goods and bads. We just have to respond in ways that protect our art and our artists,” he added.

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