
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


The conference is coming up on October 16th
For more information and to purchase tickets to TechTainment™:
https://www.laipla.net/techtainment-2025/
Being a professor in the age of AI — particularly generative AI — is both exciting and deeply challenging. As educators, we recognize that technology is evolving at a pace with which, even seasoned technologists struggle to keep up. Students are increasingly tempted to let AI do the thinking for them, believing they're being efficient when, in fact, they may be shortcutting the deeper learning process.
Using AI tools like ChatGPT should not be about replacing critical thought or original research. It's about enhancing the learning journey, not skipping it. While these tools can assist in discovery, ideation, and even structure, they cannot substitute the human insights that come from struggle, context, collaboration, and lived experience.
That's why I challenge my students to think critically: What happens when the sources AI provides don't match course materials? What if AI misses the nuances, the legal precedents, or the emerging ethics in a topic? The danger is not just in misinformation — it's in the erosion of personal accountability and intellectual depth.
This exact tension — between innovation and integrity — is what makes events like TechTainment™ so necessary.
The intersection of technology, entertainment, and the law is a rapidly evolving space filled with complex and often controversial issues.
There are a multitude of issues at the intersection of these areas. I am going to name a few, but my guest today has knowledge and depth that will convince you not to miss the upcoming 1-day TechTainment™ event. So, here goes:
1. Intellectual Property (IP) Challenges
2. AI and Deepfakes
3. Streaming & Distribution Rights
· Residuals & Fair Pay Creatives (writers, actors, directors) are demanding transparent compensation models for streamed content. This has led to major labor actions (e.g., 2023 WGA and SAG-AFTRA strikes).
· Windowing Conflicts Studios and platforms debate how long content should remain exclusive to one service before being released elsewhere — impacting revenue models and consumer access.
4. Content Moderation & Censorship
5. Privacy & Surveillance
· Data Collection Entertainment platforms like Netflix, Spotify, and YouTube gather extensive user data (viewing habits, preferences, location, device usage). The ways this data is analyzed, monetized, or shared with third parties remain legally ambiguous and often undisclosed.
· Facial Recognition & Biometrics Increasing use of biometric technologies in entertainment spaces—such as facial recognition at concerts, stadiums, and theme parks—raises major privacy concerns. There's a lack of clear legal guidelines around consent, storage, and misuse of biometric data.
· Children's Privacy Platforms aimed at children must comply with strict regulations like the Children's Online Privacy Protections
6. Content Ownership in the Creator Economy
7. NFTs & Digital Ownership
· Fraud & Scams
Emerging Legal Areas to Watch
The primary issues revolve around intellectual property rights, data privacy, platform regulation, AI ethics, and compensation for creative labor. As technology outpaces regulation, legal systems are constantly playing catch-up — often with high-stakes consequences for creators, companies, and consumers. It's about thought leadership and responsible innovation. It's about ensuring that human value — ethical reasoning, creative spark, legal foresight — isn't lost in the digital noise.
Our country is at a crossroads, and events like TechTainment™ are more than just conferences — they are forums for the future. As educators, professionals, and creators, our job is not to reject AI but to ensure we don't outsource our judgment, our integrity, or our creativity. Let AI and other innovative technology be tools — but let us be the ones who drive its purpose.
The conference is coming up on October 16th
For more information and to purchase tickets to TechTainment™:
https://www.laipla.net/techtainment-2025/
A huge thank you to Trope & Trope Law Group, protecting your IP Assets worldwide, for generously supporting this episode!
For more Small & Gutsy episodes, check out our website: www.smallandgutsy.org
By Laura S. Wittcoff5
3333 ratings
The conference is coming up on October 16th
For more information and to purchase tickets to TechTainment™:
https://www.laipla.net/techtainment-2025/
Being a professor in the age of AI — particularly generative AI — is both exciting and deeply challenging. As educators, we recognize that technology is evolving at a pace with which, even seasoned technologists struggle to keep up. Students are increasingly tempted to let AI do the thinking for them, believing they're being efficient when, in fact, they may be shortcutting the deeper learning process.
Using AI tools like ChatGPT should not be about replacing critical thought or original research. It's about enhancing the learning journey, not skipping it. While these tools can assist in discovery, ideation, and even structure, they cannot substitute the human insights that come from struggle, context, collaboration, and lived experience.
That's why I challenge my students to think critically: What happens when the sources AI provides don't match course materials? What if AI misses the nuances, the legal precedents, or the emerging ethics in a topic? The danger is not just in misinformation — it's in the erosion of personal accountability and intellectual depth.
This exact tension — between innovation and integrity — is what makes events like TechTainment™ so necessary.
The intersection of technology, entertainment, and the law is a rapidly evolving space filled with complex and often controversial issues.
There are a multitude of issues at the intersection of these areas. I am going to name a few, but my guest today has knowledge and depth that will convince you not to miss the upcoming 1-day TechTainment™ event. So, here goes:
1. Intellectual Property (IP) Challenges
2. AI and Deepfakes
3. Streaming & Distribution Rights
· Residuals & Fair Pay Creatives (writers, actors, directors) are demanding transparent compensation models for streamed content. This has led to major labor actions (e.g., 2023 WGA and SAG-AFTRA strikes).
· Windowing Conflicts Studios and platforms debate how long content should remain exclusive to one service before being released elsewhere — impacting revenue models and consumer access.
4. Content Moderation & Censorship
5. Privacy & Surveillance
· Data Collection Entertainment platforms like Netflix, Spotify, and YouTube gather extensive user data (viewing habits, preferences, location, device usage). The ways this data is analyzed, monetized, or shared with third parties remain legally ambiguous and often undisclosed.
· Facial Recognition & Biometrics Increasing use of biometric technologies in entertainment spaces—such as facial recognition at concerts, stadiums, and theme parks—raises major privacy concerns. There's a lack of clear legal guidelines around consent, storage, and misuse of biometric data.
· Children's Privacy Platforms aimed at children must comply with strict regulations like the Children's Online Privacy Protections
6. Content Ownership in the Creator Economy
7. NFTs & Digital Ownership
· Fraud & Scams
Emerging Legal Areas to Watch
The primary issues revolve around intellectual property rights, data privacy, platform regulation, AI ethics, and compensation for creative labor. As technology outpaces regulation, legal systems are constantly playing catch-up — often with high-stakes consequences for creators, companies, and consumers. It's about thought leadership and responsible innovation. It's about ensuring that human value — ethical reasoning, creative spark, legal foresight — isn't lost in the digital noise.
Our country is at a crossroads, and events like TechTainment™ are more than just conferences — they are forums for the future. As educators, professionals, and creators, our job is not to reject AI but to ensure we don't outsource our judgment, our integrity, or our creativity. Let AI and other innovative technology be tools — but let us be the ones who drive its purpose.
The conference is coming up on October 16th
For more information and to purchase tickets to TechTainment™:
https://www.laipla.net/techtainment-2025/
A huge thank you to Trope & Trope Law Group, protecting your IP Assets worldwide, for generously supporting this episode!
For more Small & Gutsy episodes, check out our website: www.smallandgutsy.org