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US appeals court rejects copyrights for AI-generated art lacking 'human' creator

Cpvr

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March 18 - A federal appeals court in Washington, D.C., on Tuesday affirmed that a work of art generated by artificial intelligence without human input cannot be copyrighted under U.S. law.
The U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit agreed, opens new tab with the U.S. Copyright Office that an image created by Stephen Thaler's AI system "DABUS" was not entitled to copyright protection, and that only works with human authors can be copyrighted.
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Tuesday's decision marks the latest attempt by U.S. officials to grapple with the copyright implications of the fast-growing generative AI industry. The Copyright Office has separately rejected artists' bids for copyrights on images generated by the AI system Midjourney.
The artists argued they were entitled to copyrights for images they created with AI assistance -- unlike Thaler, who said that his "sentient" system created the image in his case independently.
Thaler's attorney Ryan Abbott said he and his client "strongly disagree" with the ruling and intend to appeal. The Copyright Office said in a statement that it "believes the court reached the correct result."

Thaler, of St. Charles, Missouri, applied for a copyright in 2018 covering "A Recent Entrance to Paradise," a piece of visual art he said was made by his AI system. The office rejected his application in 2022, finding that creative works must have human authors to be copyrightable.
A federal district court judge in Washington upheld the decision in 2023 and said human authorship is a "bedrock requirement of copyright" based on "centuries of settled understanding." Thaler told the D.C. Circuit that the ruling threatened to "discourage investment and labor in a critically new and important developing field."

U.S. Circuit Judge Patricia Millett wrote for a unanimous three-judge panel on Tuesday that U.S. copyright law "requires all work to be authored in the first instance by a human being."
"Because many of the Copyright Act's provisions make sense only if an author is a human being, the best reading of the Copyright Act is that human authorship is required for registration," the appeals court said.

source: https://www.reuters.com/world/us/us...nerated-art-lacking-human-creator-2025-03-18/
 
Good I don't think AI generated art should be allowed to have any copyrights. It's art generated by a machine of course, only a human needs to input text into a prompt and tell the computer to generate it.
 
This opens up a stinky can of worms.

Art ai created- cant be copyrighted
Text ai created- copyright able
Software ai created- copyright able
Hardware ai created- patent able

They can't have it both ways. Either we have copyrights or we don't.
 
This opens up a stinky can of worms.

Art ai created- cant be copyrighted
Text ai created- copyright able
Software ai created- copyright able
Hardware ai created- patent able

They can't have it both ways. Either we have copyrights or we don't.
Hmm I didn't know about this. That doesn't make any sense, why disapprove copyright for AI created art but then allow it for other AI created things? Surely sometime down the road they will remove copyright approval on all AI created things.
 
@Ravenfreak Think about it this way...

1 - AI creates art, its a man-made machine designed to follow our requests to produce an image based on our inputs.

2 - A camera is a man-made machine that follows our request to reproduce as an image something you are looking at.

Tell me what the difference is. I can copyright a digital image. Even one I may have altered. The difference to me is just in the way the human interfaces and instructs the machine to produce something from my inputs.

I feel if you pick up a mechanical pencil, you are using a machine to convey your thoughts.

The art should be copyright protected. I would appeal that decision.
 
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