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How weakening copyright helps fake news

Copyright is a Pillar of Provenance

Copyright isn’t just a legal mechanism—it’s also a system of traceability. When a piece of content is protected by copyright:

This structure underpins any authenticity framework—because you can’t verify something’s authenticity unless you know where it came from.

When Copyright is Undermined…

If we allow copyrighted works to be scraped, used without consent, or blurred into AI-generated content:

This results in an ecosystem where fewer assets can be reliably traced, making any authenticity solution (C2PA, watermarking, etc.) far less effective.

Authenticity Relies on Respect for Rights

Authenticity frameworks like C2PA are built on the assumption that:

But if copyright is no longer enforced, then:

In Short

When we erode copyright, we’re not just harming creators—we’re compromising the very systems that allow us to distinguish real from fake, origin from manipulation. We dismantle the very scaffolding that upholds truth in media. We weaken our ability to verify content, to defend against deepfakes and manipulated stories, and to maintain public trust.

The fight for copyright is, increasingly, a fight for authenticity—and with it,  trust in the provenance of content.

 

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Author: Paul Melcher

Paul Melcher is a highly influential and visionary leader in visual tech, with 20+ years of experience in licensing, tech innovation, and entrepreneurship. He is the Managing Director of MelcherSystem and has held executive roles at Corbis, Gamma Press, Stipple, and more. Melcher received a Digital Media Licensing Association Award and has been named among the “100 most influential individuals in American photography”

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