Does law block social innovation? an article by a japanese lawyer worth reading
You can find the article [[here]](https://wired.jp/innovationinsights/post/wired/w/law_and_commons/?user=normal) My point of view for the questions is that the concept of 'law' itself can be redefined, from stability-focus to evolution-focus. So why don't we create 'adaptive law' so that law can grow and actually contain the ever-evolving human society? And how can this -Creative commons summit, korea
Creative Commons Global has just finished, having held in Seoul this year. The Final Document for the Summit will be uploaded [soon]
Some thoughts on the 'messiness' of human language
The art of poetry, according to my definition, is creating
Memory of humans, memory of ai
Memory has always been the essential literary themes. ‘In Search of Lost Time’, is all about reminisceing the bygone days from the first person perspective. In ‘Hundred Years of Solitude’, the narrator gives a story of a family in a hundred years time period. Although how they remember the past, or how they chronicle their stories differ from one story to another, Literature is essentially the way that humanities preserve their ‘collective’ memories. Then, can AI learn something from learning all these literary works, to be more like a human? Or if becoming a human is not the object of AI, how can we train AI so that it can understand human beings?