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aithrowawaycomm | 11 months ago
"Yes, but is it not the intent of the artist to be ignorant and lazy?"
It is possible to repeatedly iterate AI art gen and get what you want, but that's not what happened here. And even so, it's not at all the same thing as drawing a picture: "iterating on what you want" is equivalent to curating art, not creating it. In the US you can copyright curation and that extends to curation of AI art - the US Copyright Office correctly said that tweaking prompts is the same thing as tweaking a Google Images search string for online image curation. But you can't copyright the actual AI-gen pictures, they are automatically public domain (unless they infringe someone else's copyright).
dragonwriter|11 months ago
The US Copyright Office has, in fact, granted at least one copyright registration for an image created with the use of AI generation.
https://news.artnet.com/art-world/invoke-snags-first-ai-imag...
aithrowawaycomm|11 months ago
dylan604|11 months ago
Is that actually true? What I’ve read is that AI can’t be credited with the copyright.
aithrowawaycomm|11 months ago
https://www.reuters.com/legal/ai-created-images-lose-us-copy...
https://www.reuters.com/legal/litigation/us-copyright-office...
https://www.reuters.com/world/us/us-appeals-court-rejects-co...
See the other reply for a half-counterexample, but the major difference is the specific software is more like generative PhotoShop, and the final image involved a lot of manual human work. Simply tweaking a prompt is not enough - again you can get copyright for curation, just not the images."
Of course AI can't be credited with copyright - neither can a random-character generator, even if it monkeys its way into a masterpiece. You need legal standing to sue or be sued in order to hold copyright.