Amazon is exploring the creation of a marketplace that would allow publishers to license their content directly to artificial intelligence companies, as the industry grapples with legal challenges tied to the use of copyrighted material in AI training datasets.
According to a report by The Information, the company has held discussions with publishing executives and circulated presentation slides referencing a potential content marketplace ahead of a recent AWS conference for publishers. The move would position Amazon as an intermediary between content owners and AI developers seeking licensed data sources.
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When contacted for comment, Amazon did not confirm specific plans but said it maintains long-standing and innovative relationships with publishers across several business segments, including AWS, retail, advertising, artificial general intelligence and Alexa, adding that it had nothing specific to announce.
Amazon would not be alone in pursuing this approach. Microsoft recently introduced a Publisher Content Marketplace aimed at providing publishers with additional revenue opportunities while offering AI systems broader access to premium, licensed material under what it described as a transparent economic framework.
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The reported initiative comes as AI companies continue to face lawsuits and regulatory scrutiny over how copyrighted works are used in training models. While firms such as OpenAI have secured licensing agreements with major media organizations, concerns persist among publishers that AI-generated summaries—particularly those integrated into search engines—may reduce website traffic. Some publishers view a centralized licensing marketplace as a potentially more scalable and sustainable revenue model as AI adoption expands.
Source: TechCrunch
