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If there was a big rent button that would just demolish the internet,
I would smash that button with my forehead.
From the BBC, this is The Interface,
the show that explores how tech is rewiring your week and your world.
This isn't about quarterly earnings or about tech reviews.
It's about what technology is actually doing to your work, your politics,
your everyday life, and all the bizarre ways people are using the Internet.
Listen on BBC.com or wherever you get your podcasts.
Hollywood gets tough with bite dance over copyright infringement.
It's World Business Express from the BBC World Service.
I'm Gideon Long.
Plus, Cuba's fuel crisis deepens, an airport strike in Kenya, and Dave Stewart,
one half of British Ate's pop duo The Eurythmics, tells the BBC about his new business venture.
Hollywood has locked horns with ByteDance over copyright issues.
Disney and other US entertainment companies accused the Chinese tech firm of stealing their intellectual property by training its new AI tool,
C-Dance, on Disney characters and images of real-life actors.
ByteDance launched C-Dance just last week and people have used it to make incredibly realistic videos,
some of which include AI-generated versions of real actors and Disney characters.