Today,the rapid development of electronic commerce(E-commerce)has added a new driving force for China’s economic development.However,all kinds of legal problems have followed,such as uncontrolled production and sale ...Today,the rapid development of electronic commerce(E-commerce)has added a new driving force for China’s economic development.However,all kinds of legal problems have followed,such as uncontrolled production and sale of fake goods,frequent malicious complaints,endless unfair competition,and illegal infringement,which have harmed the legitimate interests of consumers and seriously damaged the market order and fair competition.In order to provide some theoretical and realistic reference for the development of China’s E-commerce industry,this paper focuses on the relevant problems in the field of“infringement”of E-commerce platforms for in-depth thinking,and puts forward suggestions for solving the existing problems based on the development status of E-commerce platforms.展开更多
As Large Language Models(LLMs)become increasingly embedded in news production,their tendency to generate"hallucinated"content-fabricated or misleading information presented as fact-raises serious legal conce...As Large Language Models(LLMs)become increasingly embedded in news production,their tendency to generate"hallucinated"content-fabricated or misleading information presented as fact-raises serious legal concerns.This paper examines the implications of such content through the lens of both copyright and personality rights,focusing on civil defamation,privacy infringement,and unauthorized reproduction of third-party materials.Using a comparative doctrinal methodology,it analyzes regulatory and tort law frameworks in China and the United States,with particular attention to the heightened standards for public figure defamation in U.S.law and the broader scope of reputational protection under Chinese civil law.By bridging the intersection of copyright and personality rights,this study offers a novel perspective on the legal classification and liability of AI-generated news.It further proposes actionable compliance strategies for media organizations and generative AI providers,including content review mechanisms and attribution standards.Finally,the paper reflects on future governance trends-especially the tension between innovation and accountability-as jurisdictions worldwide grapple with the social and legal consequences of hallucinated media content.展开更多
基金funded by the Annual Project of National Social Science Foundation of China“Research on the Fundamental Theory of Intellectual Property Law Under the System of Socialist Civil Law With Chinese Characteristics in the New Era(Project Approval No.18BFX162)”.
文摘Today,the rapid development of electronic commerce(E-commerce)has added a new driving force for China’s economic development.However,all kinds of legal problems have followed,such as uncontrolled production and sale of fake goods,frequent malicious complaints,endless unfair competition,and illegal infringement,which have harmed the legitimate interests of consumers and seriously damaged the market order and fair competition.In order to provide some theoretical and realistic reference for the development of China’s E-commerce industry,this paper focuses on the relevant problems in the field of“infringement”of E-commerce platforms for in-depth thinking,and puts forward suggestions for solving the existing problems based on the development status of E-commerce platforms.
文摘As Large Language Models(LLMs)become increasingly embedded in news production,their tendency to generate"hallucinated"content-fabricated or misleading information presented as fact-raises serious legal concerns.This paper examines the implications of such content through the lens of both copyright and personality rights,focusing on civil defamation,privacy infringement,and unauthorized reproduction of third-party materials.Using a comparative doctrinal methodology,it analyzes regulatory and tort law frameworks in China and the United States,with particular attention to the heightened standards for public figure defamation in U.S.law and the broader scope of reputational protection under Chinese civil law.By bridging the intersection of copyright and personality rights,this study offers a novel perspective on the legal classification and liability of AI-generated news.It further proposes actionable compliance strategies for media organizations and generative AI providers,including content review mechanisms and attribution standards.Finally,the paper reflects on future governance trends-especially the tension between innovation and accountability-as jurisdictions worldwide grapple with the social and legal consequences of hallucinated media content.