EuroWire, GENEVA: The World Intellectual Property Organization launched the Artificial Intelligence Infrastructure Interchange on March 17, opening a new forum for technical dialogue on how artificial intelligence is reshaping the intellectual property system. WIPO said the initiative, known as AIII, will focus on operational and technical issues linked to AI and intellectual property and is intended to complement, rather than replace, policy discussions taking place in other WIPO forums. The launch was held as a hybrid event from WIPO headquarters in Geneva.

WIPO said more than 1,700 participants registered for the launch event, including government ministers, industry executives, creators and other stakeholders from the fields of artificial intelligence and intellectual property. The organization presented AIII as a neutral platform for examining the practical systems and tools that underpin the use, management and protection of creative and innovative works as AI technologies spread across industries. WIPO has described the initiative as a joint project of its IP and Frontier Technologies Division and its Copyright Management Division.
In outlining the initiative, WIPO said AIII will not set policy or legal standards. Instead, it is designed to address technical questions that sit alongside broader debates over copyright, authorship, innovation and enforcement in the AI era. WIPO said the forum will look at how systems and tools can support creators, copyright owners and innovators while AI technology continues to develop. The structure reflects WIPO’s view that policy frameworks need workable technical solutions, standards and tools to function effectively in practice.
Technical network takes shape
A central part of the initiative is the creation of a Technical Exchange Network, or TEN, bringing together technical experts from the private sector, AI developers, rightsholders, individual creators, academia and civil society. Under the framework published by WIPO in January, the network is intended to identify potential technical solutions, share methodologies and current practices, develop common terminology and encourage cross sector and international cooperation on AI and intellectual property issues. WIPO said the network itself will not design or engineer solutions.
WIPO’s framework and factsheet list a range of subjects that may be examined through the network. They include the identification and labeling of AI generated works and other material, authenticity and provenance of original content, and the use of AI tools in both enforcement and creative processes. The framework also cites practical areas such as content identification and fingerprinting, visible and invisible watermarking, provision of information on content used in training, attribution of inputs used to generate model output, content moderation guardrails, bot detection, digital rights management and metadata standards.
Launch event drew ministers and industry leaders
The March 17 program featured opening remarks by WIPO Director General Daren Tang and high level remarks from Spain’s Culture Minister Ernest Urtasun Domènech and Morocco’s Minister for Digital Transition and Reform of the Administration Amal El Fallah Seghrouchni. Panel sessions included participants from Cloudflare, Shutterstock, Universal Music Group, publishing groups and the creative sector, reflecting WIPO’s effort to bring together technology companies, rights holders and creators in the same forum for discussion of shared technical issues.
WIPO said the Technical Exchange Network will work through members only meetings intended to provide a trusted environment for detailed discussions, while progress and results will be reported through an annual public meeting open to member states and other stakeholders. The organization has also said a government expert group could be formed if member states want one. By formally launching AIII in Geneva, WIPO has established a dedicated channel for technical engagement on AI and intellectual property at a time when questions around labeling, provenance, training data and rights management are moving closer to the center of the global IP debate.
