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budududuroiu | 19 days ago
> The court’s decision in Thaler v. Perlmutter,1 on March 18, 2025, supports the position adopted by the United States Copyright Office and is the latest chapter in the long-running saga of an attempt by a computer scientist to challenge that fundamental principle.
I, like many others, believe the only way AI won't immediately get enshittified is by fighting tooth and nail for LLM output to never be copyrightable
https://www.skadden.com/insights/publications/2025/03/appell...
roywiggins|19 days ago
Whereas someone trying to copyright LLM output would likely insist that there is human authorship is via the choice of prompts and careful selection of the best LLM output. I am not sure if claims like that have been tested.
wongarsu|18 days ago
On the other hand in a way the opinion of the US copyright office doesn't matter, what matters is what the courts decide
mikehearn|19 days ago
budududuroiu|18 days ago
It specifically highlights human authorship, not ownership
Aerroon|18 days ago
If the person who prompted the AI tool to generate something isn't considered the author (and therefore doesn't deserve copyright), then does that mean they aren't liable for the output of the AI either?
Ie if the AI does something illegal, does the prompter get off scot-free?