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US Copyright Office allows AI-assisted art copyright
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The US Copyright Office has determined that artists can copyright works created with AI assistance, while maintaining that purely AI-generated content remains ineligible for protection.

Key policy framework: The Copyright Office’s new report establishes guidelines for determining copyright eligibility of AI-assisted creative works, drawing from over 10,000 public comments and previous rulings.

  • The report affirms that using AI as an assistive tool in the creative process does not impact copyright eligibility
  • Works entirely generated by AI cannot receive copyright protection
  • Copyright eligibility for works combining human and AI contributions must be evaluated case-by-case

Practical examples and boundaries: The Copyright Office provided specific examples to illustrate the distinction between copyrightable and non-copyrightable AI-assisted works.

  • A simple text prompt to an AI system (like asking Google’s Gemini to create an image of a “bespectacled cat”) does not meet copyright requirements
  • Artists who provide graphic prompts, arrange AI-generated imagery, or augment AI outputs are more likely to receive copyright protection
  • The comic book “Zarya of the Dawn” received copyright protection as a complete work, though its individual AI-generated images were not protected

Implementation guidelines: The Copyright Office emphasized that human creative involvement remains the key factor in determining copyright eligibility.

  • Most cases involving human participation in the creation process will qualify for copyright protection
  • The threshold for copyrightability appears relatively low when human creative input is present
  • The incorporation of AI-generated content into larger creative works is generally acceptable

Pending considerations: Important questions about AI and copyright law remain unresolved and will be addressed in future guidance.

  • A forthcoming report will examine the training of AI models on copyrighted works
  • Licensing considerations and liability allocation remain open questions
  • Ongoing lawsuits between artists and AI companies over training data usage await resolution

Future implications: The Copyright Office’s guidance suggests a balanced approach that protects human creativity while acknowledging AI’s growing role in artistic production, though questions about fair use and training data rights continue to shape the evolving legal landscape.

Artists can copyright works made using AI as an ‘assistive tool’, US Copyright Office concludes

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