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L’IA générative
L’intelligence artificielle (IA) soulève de nombreuses questions en matière de propriété intellectuelle (PI).
Mondial | Publication | décembre 2019
Some of the world’s largest pension funds and asset managers are drawing up plans for mandatory corporate reporting of climate issues and carbon pricing, among other actions, as outlined on day 8 of COP25 in Madrid. A panel moderated by Sir Nicholas Stern, attracted some of the largest pension funds and asset managers globally including Aviva, the Japanese Government Pension Fund, the Danish Pension Fund PFA, Allianz (also representing the Asset Owners Alliance, members of which commit to reduce carbon emissions of their investment portfolios to net-zero by 2050), the German Central Cooperative Bank and BNPP.
Each was tasked with identifying action required for governments to drive transformative change through finance. Key takeaways called for were:
In terms of action, examples include the Japanese Government Pension Fund (the world’s biggest pension fund) making Environmental, social and governance (ESG) a key decision point in its selection of asset managers. The organization is also pushing a change of benchmark indexes that it uses to provide a greater ESG focus. Aviva is looking to embed climate change expertise within debt and equity teams with the objective of backing the right investments, and diverting capital away from those not part of the climate fight. The German Central Cooperative Bank representative provided a series of actionable suggestions, including building sustainable development bond purchasing directly into sovereign bonds to mainstream them quickly, and using FinTech and document standardization to speed up access to green bonds.
Whilst the commitment of business to mitigating climate change is not new, it is clear that global pension funds and other key financial players recognize the gravity of the risks facing the planet if transformative change does not happen in the 2020s. The key takeaway was a call for governments to catch up.
Publication
L’intelligence artificielle (IA) soulève de nombreuses questions en matière de propriété intellectuelle (PI).
Publication
Depuis 2022, le gouvernement du Canada a apporté trois vagues de modifications à la Loi sur la concurrence (Loi), apportant des modifications importantes aux lois canadiennes sur la concurrence, les plus récentes modifications ayant reçu la sanction royale le 20 juin 2024. Notre publication sur toutes les modifications se trouve ici.
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Les systèmes d’IA générative sont entraînés au moyen de gros volumes de données, souvent tirées de sources du domaine public qui peuvent être protégées par le droit d’auteur ou d’autres droits de propriété intellectuelle, comme un droit sur les bases de données au Royaume-Uni et dans l’UE.
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