Al-Amn Magazine

legal and ethical frameworks that step away from binary approaches built on the idea that AI innovation and human creativity are essentially in competition and to be treated in isolation from each other. If AI is to benefit creativity and humanity, its development must consider the collective needs of creators, technologists, policymakers, researchers, and the wider public. The consultation will thus include multiple stakeholders, with different perspectives. Copyright literacy has been defined as ‹Acquiring and demonstrating the appropriate knowledge, skills and behaviours to enable the ethical creation and use of copyright material’. Copyright is a complex and technical area of law that is understood and experienced differently by different communities. Although not everyone needs to become an expert in copyright law, using innovative educational resources and empirical evidence on the way copyright impacts on the creative economy makes it possible to have informed and inclusive discussions about how laws should work. All participants must have an equal opportunity to influence the outcomes. In practice, this means a willingness to listen to sometimes opposing perspectives and finding workable compromises. As AI continues to evolve, shaping the future of creativity, governance must keep pace by fostering a legal and ethical landscape that supports both technological advancement and human ingenuity. By engaging a diverse range of voices, from creators to technologists, civil society groups and policymakers, frameworks can be developed that harness AI’s potential while safeguarding the rights and livelihoods of those who drive human creativity forward. ox.ac.uk

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