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Open consultation on EU strategy for AI in science

The EU Commission is seeking input on how to accelerate the uptake of AI in science—encouraging more researchers to use it as a tool while carefully managing its impact on the scientific process. The strategy will lay the groundwork for a European AI Research Council, envisioned as a “Resource for AI Science in Europe” (RAISE), aimed at…

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EU COM launches consultation on scope of general-purpose AI model rules

As discussions continue on the Code of Practice, the EU COM has opened a consultation to define the scope of the definition of General-Purpose AI models and of the obligations falling on them. The stakeholder feedback will inform guidelines expected to be published in August 2025, defining concepts such as general-purpose AI models, placing on the market, downstream providers….

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Lobbying intensifies on EU Code of Practice for General-Purpose AI

The Code of Practice outlining obligations for general-purpose AI providers was due to be finalised by 1 May. However, with both tech companies and rightsholders dissatisfied with the draft, the EU AI Office has postponed the adoption deadline to August 2025, citing a need to “prioritise extended feedback cycles as requested by all stakeholders.” A broad…

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Mounting pressures on U.S. science funding and universities

With so much happening in US Federal Science Agencies, we want to ensure you hadn’t missed a selection of key developments last month: The Department of Energy announced  it will join the NIH in attempting to cap indirect cost rates at 15% to “halt inefficient spending” by universities. Recall that the NIH’s effort has been blocked  by a federal judge,…

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US science leaders reveal priorities, while some head for exits

There was significant news from the White House Office of Science and Technology Policy last week, as well as from nominated and incumbent science agency leaders. Here’s a roundup: OSTP Director Michael Kratsios outlined the Administration’s priorities in his first significant speech since being confirmed. He called for an America First science agenda and protection of “intellectual capital.”…

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Trump Administration proposes significant cuts for FY26

On Friday, the Trump Administration released a partial budget request for Fiscal Year 2026, which begins on October 1. While the President’s budget is only a request—Congress must still pass appropriations bills, which often differ significantly—it signals this Administration’s continued aggressive stance on federal spending. That makes this proposal more consequential than a typical opening bid….

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NIH moves immediate access requirement to 1 July

The NIH has unexpectedly revised the implementation timeline for its updated 2024 public access policy (the 2024 updated policy). The new requirement will now take effect on 1 July 2025, instead of the previously announced 31 December 2025. Under this policy, any peer-reviewed article reporting on NIH-funded research that is accepted for publication on or after 1 July 2025 must…

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STM Integrity Hub expands with Springer Nature’s AI-Powered Text Detection Tool

STM is proud to welcome the integration of a proprietary AI tool donated by Springer Nature into the STM Integrity Hub. Originally developed to identify AI-generated nonsense text in research manuscripts, this tool has been successfully used across Springer Nature’s journals and books. Its donation marks a significant step forward in collective efforts to uphold…

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STM files amicus brief in DMCA Case 

STM has filed an amicus brief in Doe v. GitHub before the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit, supporting rightsholders alongside the Authors Guild, the Association of American Publishers, and the News/Media Alliance. The brief argues that the district court misapplied Section 1202 of the DMCA by requiring that infringed works be “identical” to original…

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STM defends copyright in AI case 

STM has filed an amicus brief supporting authors in the Kadrey v. Meta litigation, which challenges Meta’s use of copyrighted works to train its generative AI systems.  The brief underscores that Meta knowingly copied and distributed large volumes of copyrighted content sourced from notorious piracy websites—including Z-Library, Libgen, Sci-Hub, and others—that have been repeatedly shut…

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