European screenwriters gathered in Berlin made strategy decisions in a context of growing threats against freedom of artistic expression and challenges to authors’ rights in the area of Artificial Intelligence.
At the first edition of the European Screenwriters Day in Berlin, screenwriters from Germany and all over Europe are gathering to exchange views on their job as screenwriter in a context of threatened freedom of artistic expression and incredibly fast development of Artificial Intelligence.
A Call to Action from Audiovisual Authors to the members of the European Parliament to enforce EU values and principles
Audiovisual authors call on the EU Parliament to hold the Commission and Council accountable to EU values during a dinner with MEPs in Strasbourg.
FSE co-signed a letter addressed to MEPs, members of the Legal Affairs (JURI) Committee of the European Parliament. Together with other creators’ organisations, we make recommendations on the proposed amendments to the JURI Committee draft report on copyright and AI.
FSE joins a coalition of rightsholder organisations to express dissatisfaction with the AI Act implementation measures adopted by the EU Commission.
FSE co-signs a Joint letter to the European Parliament’s JURI Committee on the upcoming own-initiative report on copyright and generative AI.
FSE endorses Manifesto for the Protection of Authentic Creation launched in Montreal.
FSE is part of a broad coalition of organisations in Europe’s creative and cultural sectors. Together they launch a campaign on the #AIAct. Keywords: Transparency. Consent. Remuneration. They call on EU policymakers to #StayTrueToTheAct.
FSE co-signed an open letter to the attention of the European Ministers of Culture ahead of the Education, Youth, Culture and Sport Council on 12-13 May 2025. They now have a prominent role to play on the specific impact of AI on European cultural diversity and artistic freedom, which are cornerstones of European values and essential pillars of wellfunctioning democracies.