Artists can still make money and copyright their stuff. You just can’t use exclusively AI to create the images. Cleaning up an AI generated image count as artistic work. Color correct, add missing fingers, make the eyes point the same way, remove background monstrosities. It all adds up.
Unfortunately this also goes for Hollywood. They can generate the bulk of the work and have one guy do the editing and suddenly they own the edit.
The real losers in this are the people that generate images with no modifications and post it as is while pretending that they are doing art.
You are correct. Hollywood will simply change up a couple things and then use the assets.
However, I‘m still undecided about how I think about whether generating AI art should count as Human-generated or not. On one hand, people can spend hours if not days or week perfecting a prompt with different tools like ControlNet, different promptstyles and etc. On the other hand, somebody comes up to midjourney, asks for a picture of a dragon wearing a T-Shirt and immediately gets an image that looks pretty decent. It’s probably not exactly what they wanted, but close enough, right? AI gets you 90% there what you want, and the other 10% is the super-hard part that takes forever. Anyway, sorry for dumping my though process from this comment chain on here xD
That latter case likely wont be copyrightable, but the former can start to meet this criteria mentioned in the article:
An application for a work created with the help of AI can support a copyright claim if a human “selected or arranged” it in a “sufficiently creative way that the resulting work constitutes an original work of authorship,” it said.
The way I read that, the more instruction you give to the composition of the image (ie, how detailed and descriptive you are with your prompt) the better claim you would have to copyrighting the resultant work.
I think the mistake lots of people are making is that all AI generated art is the same and should all be treated the same. Which is likely not going to be the case. And Copyright rulings are mostly done on a case by case bases, unless there is significant change this will likely still hold true and so one ruling on some AI generated art might not result in the same ruling for a different piece created in a different way with different effort.
What this case shot down is the claim that AI can claim copyright on a works as an AI is not human and copyright only applies to humans. Which is the same stance courts have tend before with content created by animals.
Not impossible. If you generate something with AI and claim you created it yourself you can easily be asked to reproduce a similar works again. If you don’t have the skills to do so then that is fairly big evidence that you don’t hold the copy right over it. If you do have the skills, then you are far less likely to purely lean on AI generated works without putting in some more creative stances on those works, even if you are using AI as part of creating those works.
If you say you did use AI you should be able to show how much effort you are putting into creating the images, how you write your prompts, how you correct mistakes etc. All that is a skill you need to learn and it should not be so hard to show someone you do have that skill or not.
Are these definitive? No, not much evidence is definitive, but a collection of various things can help paint a picture. So there are ways to you can show if someone is likely to be lying about how much effort they put into some work. Which makes it distinctly easier than impossible to prove their claims false or not.
If you generate something with AI and claim you created it yourself you can easily be asked to reproduce a similar works again.
Asked by whom exactly? The Copyright Office? Are they going to ask for prove from every artist that requests registration for a work?
If you say you did use AI you should be able to show how much effort you are putting into creating the images
Or you can lie in your request. From the Compendium of U.S. Copyright Office Practices:
“As a general rule, the U.S. Copyright Office accepts the facts stated in the registration materials, unless they are contradicted by information provided elsewhere in the registration materials or in the Office’s records.”
Sorry, I am firmly in the camp where that isn’t art. The prompt writing can be a literary work but the result isn’t a work of art. You set up the environment that allowed the image to exist but you didnt make the image.
But the treatment of photographs in the decision fits your description. The photographer sets up the environment that allowed the image to exist but it’s the camera that makes the image. The judge held that was protectable because the image represents the human’s mental conception of the scene. It’s not a ridiculous stretch to consider AI to be merely a camera for the prompt-writer’s mental conception. I am certain this argument has been or will be tried in court. The IP owner industry is far from done litigating this topic.
I remember this artist who used a jet engine to throw paint onto a big canvas. Was the resulting artwork made by the jet engine, based on what you’re saying?
I’m not confrontational. I just like the discussion. This whole topic is, well, fascinating.
Yeah while this suit covers a very specific scenario, a large majority of AI driven content does have human interaction and does qualify for copyright.
Even just a draft, fed into an AI finishing system, has some human interaction. Nothing is going to stop the AI revolution.
Artists can still make money and copyright their stuff. You just can’t use exclusively AI to create the images. Cleaning up an AI generated image count as artistic work. Color correct, add missing fingers, make the eyes point the same way, remove background monstrosities. It all adds up.
Unfortunately this also goes for Hollywood. They can generate the bulk of the work and have one guy do the editing and suddenly they own the edit.
The real losers in this are the people that generate images with no modifications and post it as is while pretending that they are doing art.
You are correct. Hollywood will simply change up a couple things and then use the assets.
However, I‘m still undecided about how I think about whether generating AI art should count as Human-generated or not. On one hand, people can spend hours if not days or week perfecting a prompt with different tools like ControlNet, different promptstyles and etc. On the other hand, somebody comes up to midjourney, asks for a picture of a dragon wearing a T-Shirt and immediately gets an image that looks pretty decent. It’s probably not exactly what they wanted, but close enough, right? AI gets you 90% there what you want, and the other 10% is the super-hard part that takes forever. Anyway, sorry for dumping my though process from this comment chain on here xD
That latter case likely wont be copyrightable, but the former can start to meet this criteria mentioned in the article:
The way I read that, the more instruction you give to the composition of the image (ie, how detailed and descriptive you are with your prompt) the better claim you would have to copyrighting the resultant work.
I think the mistake lots of people are making is that all AI generated art is the same and should all be treated the same. Which is likely not going to be the case. And Copyright rulings are mostly done on a case by case bases, unless there is significant change this will likely still hold true and so one ruling on some AI generated art might not result in the same ruling for a different piece created in a different way with different effort.
What this case shot down is the claim that AI can claim copyright on a works as an AI is not human and copyright only applies to humans. Which is the same stance courts have tend before with content created by animals.
It is if you don’t say it’s AI generated or you lie about how much human input it required which would be impossible to prove false.
Not impossible. If you generate something with AI and claim you created it yourself you can easily be asked to reproduce a similar works again. If you don’t have the skills to do so then that is fairly big evidence that you don’t hold the copy right over it. If you do have the skills, then you are far less likely to purely lean on AI generated works without putting in some more creative stances on those works, even if you are using AI as part of creating those works.
If you say you did use AI you should be able to show how much effort you are putting into creating the images, how you write your prompts, how you correct mistakes etc. All that is a skill you need to learn and it should not be so hard to show someone you do have that skill or not.
Are these definitive? No, not much evidence is definitive, but a collection of various things can help paint a picture. So there are ways to you can show if someone is likely to be lying about how much effort they put into some work. Which makes it distinctly easier than impossible to prove their claims false or not.
Asked by whom exactly? The Copyright Office? Are they going to ask for prove from every artist that requests registration for a work?
Or you can lie in your request. From the Compendium of U.S. Copyright Office Practices:
“As a general rule, the U.S. Copyright Office accepts the facts stated in the registration materials, unless they are contradicted by information provided elsewhere in the registration materials or in the Office’s records.”
Sorry, I am firmly in the camp where that isn’t art. The prompt writing can be a literary work but the result isn’t a work of art. You set up the environment that allowed the image to exist but you didnt make the image.
But the treatment of photographs in the decision fits your description. The photographer sets up the environment that allowed the image to exist but it’s the camera that makes the image. The judge held that was protectable because the image represents the human’s mental conception of the scene. It’s not a ridiculous stretch to consider AI to be merely a camera for the prompt-writer’s mental conception. I am certain this argument has been or will be tried in court. The IP owner industry is far from done litigating this topic.
I remember this artist who used a jet engine to throw paint onto a big canvas. Was the resulting artwork made by the jet engine, based on what you’re saying?
I’m not confrontational. I just like the discussion. This whole topic is, well, fascinating.
Plenty of things that take weeks of work aren’t art.
Definitely. Ask anybody who finally evacuated the last thing they ate from Olive Garden!
Yeah while this suit covers a very specific scenario, a large majority of AI driven content does have human interaction and does qualify for copyright.
Even just a draft, fed into an AI finishing system, has some human interaction. Nothing is going to stop the AI revolution.