The copyright disputes of the large model era may finally have reached a "settlement plan" led by tech giants.

Amazon is planning to launch a new AI content market, aiming to build a value bridge between publishers and AI large model developers.

Saying goodbye to the 'free lunch,' content licensing is now formalized.

For a long time, publishers and AI companies have been embroiled in disputes over the copyright of training data. According to insiders at AWS meetings, Amazon's new plan will allow publishers to sell content copyrights directly to tech companies.

Changes in billing models: Publishers are currently proposing to charge based on "usage," rather than a one-time buyout.

Legitimate transaction channels: This market will be deeply integrated with AWS's AI tools and developer ecosystem, providing legitimate copyright trading paths for content providers and developers.

Amazon's "three birds with one stone" strategy.

Amazon this move is not only to resolve copyright disputes, but also hides its strategic ambitions in the AI ecosystem:

Expanding the AWS value chain: Through the "content + AI" market, AWS will evolve from a mere provider of computing power into a resource matching platform.

Strengthening cloud computing dominance: Enhancing customer loyalty of AWS and opening up a new revenue growth curve.

Building an AI supply chain: In conjunction with Amazon's future heavy investment in the AI field, it aims to build a global leading AI supply chain system.

Power struggles among giants: Microsoft is also secretly entering the scene.

Amazon is not the only player. It is reported that Microsoft is also developing a similar publisher content market in parallel. When AI models' demand for high-quality data reaches its peak, whoever secures publishers first will control the discourse power of the next generation of AI evolution.

As reflected by Amazon (China) Investment Co., Ltd. and other branches, Amazon