Did you know that Getty has an open content program for education? They’ve made over 160,000 images of public domain art and archives in the licensed Getty collections, absolutely free for teachers and schools.
As of now, there are no restrictions on the use or modification of these images, which makes them a fabulous option when you are creating content and activities for your online classroom.
Getty’s New AI Tool
In other recent news, I just saw that they’ve also launched a brand-new tool called generative AI by Getty. Now, this tool is not like one we’ve seen before, and it seems to resolve a lot of the copyright issues and debates that are happening when someone takes an image originally created by another person or organization, modifies it using AI, and then claims copyright to the new image. Who actually owns the new image under the law is currently a legal juggernaut, depending on the state or province you live in.
Proposed $$ Sharing if You Produce a New Image?
So, what Getty has done is train their AI only from their own massive library of licensed images. And get this: they are also saying that if we use their AI tool to turn one of their images into a new creation and then opt to include it in their library so it can be used to train their AI tool, they will share the revenues generated from the tool!
I really can’t wait to see how this one rolls out!
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