"The legal trajectory of AI-generated content presents a pivotal opportunity for open education, directly addressing the twin problems of legal uncertainty and eroded trust outlined at the outset," wqrites Rory McGreal. First, AI-generated content is automatically open content. "The clear consensus that purely AI-generated works are not copyrightable and belong to the public domain provides a stable legal foundation. Educators can use such content without fear of copyright infringement, licensing fees, or complex attribution chains. This demystifies a major part of the 'minefield,' transforming the 'what if' from a source of dread into a clear guideline: autonomous GenAI can be used to create OER lessons." That doesn't mean 'anything goes'. "The academic community must uphold principles of authorship, accountability, and transparency. Using public domain AI content does not absolve educators of the need for due diligence, citation of specific sources, or ethical disclosure of AI assistance in human-AI collaborations."
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Stephen Downes works with the Digital Technologies Research Centre at the National Research Council of Canada specializing in new instructional media and personal learning technology. His degrees are in Philosophy, specializing in epistemology, philosophy of mind, and philosophy of science. He has taught for the University of Alberta, Athabasca University, Grand Prairie Regional College and Assiniboine Community College. His background includes expertise in journalism and media, both as a prominent blogger and as founder of the Moncton Free Press online news cooperative. He is one of the originators of the first Massive Open Online Course, has published frequently about online and networked learning, has authored learning management and content syndication software, and is the author of the widely read e-learning newsletter OLDaily. Downes is a member of NRC's Research Ethics Board. He is a popular keynote speaker and has spoken at conferences around the world.

Stephen Downes,
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Casselman
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The point of Donald Clark's article is to offer what I guess we can call 'the standard argument': "Generating words, knowledge and solutions is better than simply reading, highlighting text or getting AI to do it for you. Acts of personal generation provide the context for greater understanding and subsequent recall.... This is a short-term pain, long-term gain idea, where desirable difficulties are learning challenges that make the learner study harder in the short term to improve long-term retention and understanding." He then offers an eight-step approach to writing essays along these lines. It's funny, but I would do the eight steps in reverse order - write a version, test my conclusion, identify what's missing, etc. The idea that you use your writing to reason things out and to reach a conclusion is, in my mind, just wrong.
Today: Total: Donald Clark, Donald Clark Plan B, 2026/03/16 [Direct Link]This article is focused mostly on European institutions, though its conclusions could be more widely applied. Ultimately, I think, the recommendation is for institutions to at least include federated social media (such as Mastodon) among their accounts lists. The three reasons are openness, user agency, and reach. People need "a public, open communications platform that is accessible to all citizens, without the need for an account; an independent network not subject to censorship due to opaque algorithms or political bias."
Today: Total: Elena Rossini, 2026/03/16 [Direct Link]On the one hand, I think the proposal is sound: using random audits to deter cheating rather than mass surveillance. On the other hand, however, I think that David Wiley's argument misses the point: if using an AI counts as 'cheating', then probably whatever you are assessing for is the wrong thing to assess. 16 page PDF.
Today: Total: David Wiley, SSRN, 2026/03/16 [Direct Link]"Impractical, sure," says the website, "but fun." I assume that Aether is using the Personal Data Servers (PDS) as a file store. That would explain that anybody with the address would be able to read them (AT isn't really intended to be a privacy-first protocol). It's an interesting test of the protocol's capabilities.
Today: Total: Terrence O'Brien, The Verge, 2026/03/16 [Direct Link]This could have been a really useful critique of Summit School and the Chan Zuckerberg Initiative's forays into learning technology, but it undermines its own message with unnecessary sarcasm, typos, missing spaces between words (was it copied from some output of something?) and just plain bad reasoning typified by personal attacks, innuendo and loaded questions. What's the point of this? Readers will find some of the links useful (though many of them are self-links, so look before you click). I get that the name of the blog is Curmudgucation, but this reads more like the opposite of that. Via Thomas Ultican.
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Last Updated: Mar 17, 2026 08:37 a.m.

