Copyright in the Age of Generative AI – Part I

As generative AI transforms how content is created, courts and policymakers are struggling to define authorship, ownership, and infringement. This piece explores the legal, regulatory, and conceptual challenges posed by AI-generated works and the future of copyright in an era of machine-assisted creativity.
Take note Big Tech: Mexico just rewrote the rules of competition

Mexico’s sweeping June 30th reforms to its Federal Economic Competition Law have ushered in a new era of antitrust enforcement, creating the powerful Comisión Nacional Antimonopolio (CNA) to challenge Big Tech’s dominance through stricter merger reviews, expanded data access powers, and significantly higher financial penalties.
AI Copyright Rulings Reshape the Fair Use Doctrine

Recent U.S. court wins for Meta and Anthropic strengthen fair use defenses in AI training, but deepen global copyright tensions. While enabling U.S. firms to accelerate innovation, the rulings raise legal, ethical, and diplomatic risks abroad—fueling debates over data rights, licensing models, and the future of generative AI regulation.
Lloyd v Google and the Collapse of UK Data Class Actions

Despite strong data protection laws, UK courts have stymied efforts to enforce privacy rights through class actions, creating a system where rights exist without remedies—leaving individuals unprotected, businesses relieved but exposed, and the UK increasingly isolated from global digital accountability trends.