The legality of GPS spoofing depends on how it's done and how the technology is used, though most people don't have much to worry about. Using GPS spoofing for purposes such as improving privacy, testing apps or accessing region-specific features is generally low-risk. You're unlikely to face legal consequences as long as you aren't using it to deceive, exploit or harm others. The method used by consumer tools, including VPNs with built-in GPS spoofing, don't interfere with real satellite signals. Instead, they simply override the location your device reports to apps at the software level. Thi
The US Copyright Office's January 2025 report states that AI-generated work can be copyrighted only when a human adds meaningful creative input, but not when the work comes from prompts alone. "What that is is sort of up for interpretation. But it still needs to be some human creation," Relani Belous, founder of Belous Law Corporation and The Trademark Channel, tells me. Before you start planning how to monetize your AI-generated tracks, Belous says people should think twice before hitting publish. She recommends understanding the terms and the legal risk, and consulting a legal expert. (Belo