I'm Not A Machine

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I'm Not A Machine

I'm Not A Machine

@imnotamachine

Creative Audio Post-Production The Agency of Real Sound Led by Executive Recording Producer @VerityPabla #ImNotAMachine #AnUnrivalledListener

Leamington Spa | Prague | LA 가입일 Aralık 2013
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I'm Not A Machine
I'm Not A Machine@imnotamachine·
It’s live! The new I’m Not A Machine website is ready for your eyes (and ears). The last one held its own. It was built, tweaked, and evolved as we went. But this version? This one reflects who we really are now. The Agency of Real Sound imnotamachine.com #IMNOTAMACHINE
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I'm Not A Machine@imnotamachine·
After work drinks tomorrow with #ImNotAMachine? If you're in Leamington Spa pass through for choice tunes, exclusive cocktails/mocktails, light snacks and niceee creative company! Fluters Bar in @1millstreet with @veritypabla
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I'm Not A Machine
I'm Not A Machine@imnotamachine·
On Friday #ImNotAMachine is taking over the sound system at 1 Mill Street, Leamington Spa. Join @veritypabla in Fluters Bar for a chilled RnB vibe & creative mixer. Free entry from 4pm...
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I'm Not A Machine@imnotamachine·
Today from 4-9pm in Leamington Spa! Pass through if you appreciate CHOICE soulful RnB tunes, niceee drinks, and good people...free entry @1millstreet
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𝗝𝗼𝗵𝗻𝗮𝘁𝗵𝗮𝗻 𝗕𝗿𝗮𝗻𝘀𝗼𝗻
📢 Announcing Spark Lite Speakers! Join us on Fri 14 Feb (10am – 2pm) at @spacentre for 2 power-packed, hour-long sessions, chaired by @Nicolejustdis, where you will hear from local creatives as they share 10-minute updates on their exciting projects & initiatives. The line-up👇
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Ed Newton-Rex
Ed Newton-Rex@ednewtonrex·
Sir Elton John joins Sir Paul McCartney in rejecting - in the strongest possible terms - the UK government’s plan to upend copyright law to favour AI companies. He says the plan “will allow global big tech companies to gain free and easy access to artists’ work in order to train their artificial intelligence and create competing music. This will dilute and threaten young artists’ earnings even further. The musician community rejects it wholeheartedly.” @RhonddaBryant @lisanandy @Keir_Starmer theguardian.com/music/2025/jan…
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Karla Ortiz
Karla Ortiz@kortizart·
🚨UK People🚨 Your government is proposing a HUGE change to copyright law, where they give away YOUR works to Tech companies to profit from for FREE! A disgusting overreach that will cause irreparable harm to ALL creatives and beyond .You have one chance to stop it, read how👇
Ed Newton-Rex@ednewtonrex

Today, the UK government announced a proposal to change copyright law - for the benefit of AI companies - that would cause huge, irreversible harm to creators. More info below, but most importantly here's what you can do (wherever you live): 1. Email your MP. If you're in the UK, here's a template letter you can copy - docs.google.com/document/d/1Xt… - and you can find your local MP's details here - members.parliament.uk/members/Commons. 2. If you're a creator, email your representatives. Your publisher, record label, union - whoever represents you. Here's a second template letter you can copy - docs.google.com/document/d/1VT…. You need to know your representatives are representing your views. 3. Respond to the consultation. You can do so by emailing copyrightconsultation@ipo.gov.uk. If possible, write your own response, and go into all the detail you can. Feel free to use info / data I've prepared here - docs.google.com/document/d/12w…. 4. Share these template letters with anyone you know. The more people get involved, the more the government will get the message that a broad copyright exception is the wrong path to be pursuing. -- And here's a summary of the government's proposal, and why I think it's so problematic: - Broad new copyright exception for commercial generative AI training. AI companies will be able to train on British copyrighted work without a licence, even if the AI model is designed to compete with the creators whose work is trained on. This would make the UK one of the most punitive jurisdictions for creators in the world. - Rights holders can 'reserve their rights', i.e. opt out. But opt-outs don't work (you can't successfully opt out downstream copies of your work), most creators miss the chance to opt-out, doing so is a huge admin burden, etc. AI companies should be getting opt-in consent - it's unfair to shift the burden to creators. - AI companies must offer some level of transparency over their training data. This would be good if presented on its own, but it's much less helpful if you're packaging it up with a broad copyright exception that lets AI companies train on most of the UK's creative output with impunity. The consultation on these proposals lasts for 10 weeks. Anyone who cares about this issue should do whatever they can to make their views known to government now - there will only be one chance.

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Ed Newton-Rex
Ed Newton-Rex@ednewtonrex·
Announcing a new company I'm launching today - Great British AI. For the last year or so, I’ve argued that AI companies should treat creators fairly, by licensing the training data they use. I come from the UK, where this is currently required by law. But today, the UK government announced that it intends to change the law, and make it legal for AI companies to train on people’s copyrighted work without a licence, to attract more AI companies to its shores. So I’m launching a company that will take full advantage of this, and that I hope aligns with the government’s intentions. It’s called Great British AI, and our mission is to replace the country’s creative workers with AI. The UK’s creative industries are responsible for 5% of GDP, worth £124 billion, which represents a huge opportunity for AI companies that can train on those industries’ work with impunity in order to replace them. We agree with OpenAI’s former CTO when she said, “some creative jobs maybe will go away, but maybe they shouldn’t have been there in the first place” – and we intend to help achieve this dream. The government’s proposal gives us one of our key resources — training data — for free, bringing the dream well within reach. Our strategy is simple. We will immediately start scraping British creators’ copyrighted work from the internet (it is publicly available in huge quantities, since creators and media companies have been putting it online for years in order to gain exposure). We will do this across all media types — illustration, photography, writing, news, video creation, and more. We will train cutting-edge generative AI models on the work we scrape; these models will then be able to generate vast amounts of new works, which bear enough similarity to the works we trained on to be able to compete effectively in those same markets; and we will sell access to these models, giving customers a far cheaper alternative to licensing the original works. By doing this, we will rapidly subsume much of the existing market for creative works in the UK, replacing an expensive ecosystem of creators with a much cheaper, fully AI-driven alternative. We will do so without paying the creators whose work we’re using to replace them. And this is all made possible by the government’s proposed changes to copyright law. The government proposal gives rights holders the chance to opt out of AI training — but we’re not concerned about this. All the available data suggests that take-up for opt-out schemes of this nature is low (<10%), and we expect numbers here to be similar — after all, most creators won’t realise they can opt out, and for an individual to opt out all of their works will be a huge administrative burden. What’s more, even creators who do try to opt out will no doubt have licensed their works to other settings (for instance, a photographer licensing their work to be used in an ad), and the chances they will be able to opt out all these downstream copies of their works are vanishingly small — so we’ll be able to get most of the data we want anyway. And there is nothing in the government proposal that says how quickly we have to retrain and replace our models when creators opt-out of training — so, even after people opt out, we will continue to use models already trained on their work for years. Thankfully, the opt-out proposal really presents essentially no barrier to our scraping and training efforts at all. Why build this business in the UK? Because it is the perfect home for it, with the proposed update to the law. In the US, the ‘fair use’ copyright exception is nuanced, and the effect that copying has on the potential market for and value of the original work factors into legal decisions regarding whether certain uses of copyrighted works are legal or not. It is hard to see how most unlicensed generative AI training could be legal under US law, given that it competes with the work it’s trained on  — and we imagine many of the outstanding lawsuits brought by rights holders against AI companies in the US will be successful as a result. But the UK’s proposal brings no such issues. In the UK, it will quite simply be legal to train on copyrighted work without a licence, as long as you respect an opt-out scheme that, as discussed above, will in reality have very little effect. This is a huge opportunity for companies like ours that aim to replace human creative labour by ingesting, remixing and regurgitating the results of that labour. Of course, we will have competitors. With this change to the law, we will be far from the only AI company adopting this strategy. Once training on copyrighted work in the UK without a licence is legal, every AI company will be incentivised to scrape as much British copyrighted work as they can, and train and release models, as quickly as possible. The commercial opportunity in replacing human labour in the creative industries is huge, and the inevitably slow pace of people opting out will reward fast movers. Other companies may not be as open as us about their strategy and motivations, but we have no doubt that they are making similar plans — they would be crazy not to. Competition will be fierce, but we will work tirelessly to grab as much of the UK’s creative output as we can, and automate away as many of the UK’s creative jobs as possible. And we don’t intend to stop at automating the creative industries. In the long term, our vision is much bigger. We agree with OpenAI when they say that AI tools will be “economically valuable to companies in part by automating roles”, and will be able to replace people, and with the 41% of senior executives who expect to decrease the size of their workforce thanks to AI. We believe that much of the labour market is up for grabs. The UK’s proposed change to the law is a clear signal: AI investment, and the automation of labour irrespective of outdated rights, is a future that we as a country are proud to embrace. We expect legislation to continue to reflect this, and we are sure that the government will present more opportunities to automate different sectors over time.
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philip lewis
philip lewis@Phil_Lewis_·
Tracy Chapman, who has not performed in public in years, performs "Fast Car" with Luke Combs at the #Grammys:
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Supe Troop
Supe Troop@supetroopmusic·
Fresh poster for Mothers' Instinct!!! Music supervised by our Laura Katz.
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I'm Not A Machine
I'm Not A Machine@imnotamachine·
Another win! Silver at Eurobest 2023 for Heineken's Fresher Stats video. There isn't a single voiceover that DeeLayDee has done that isn't award-winning and she's an MC not a VO artist! We tell a proper story! #ImNotAMachine #LePub
LePub@LePub_worldwide

We’re really grateful because our wish came true this year at Eurobest with 2 Golds and 5 Silvers, but also 7 Bronze decorations that will seat nicely on our shelf. Just on time for the holiday celebrations. Read more on: bit.ly/Eurobest_23

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