Understanding AI Oversight: Identifying Key Players in Regulatory Frameworks
Clarifying Authorship in AI-Generated Works: A Guide to Copyright Principles and Ownership
As AI technologies get powerful and more people start using them, we face another ethical question: who owns the copyright to AI creations?
After all, since AI isn’t human, it cannot hold ownership over its creations. So, if an AI makes something, who do we attribute it to? The AI’s programmer? The person who initiated the prompts? Or the sources the AI used?
What Is Copyright? Does It Apply to Non-Human Creations?
Before talking about copyright, we must first define it. According to theUS Copyright Office (USCO), “Copyright is a type of intellectual property that protects original works of authorship as soon as an author fixes the work in a tangible form of expression.”
It further defines original works as:
Works are original when they are independently created by a human author and have a minimal degree of creativity.
So, for copyright to apply to any work, it must be created by a human. This issue was tested with the so-called monkey selfie copyright dispute.
In this incident, British nature photographer David Slater set himself up between 2008 and 2011 to befriend a wild Celebes crested macaques troop. He was able to gain their trust, but they were still too nervous for him to get a close-up image.
Image Credit: David Slater/Wikimedia Commons
Image Credit: David Slater/Wikimedia Commons
Close
So, he set up his camera gear on a tripod with a remote release and let the monkeys play with them. The animals were amused at the reflections, and since they pressed the remote shutter button while playing with his equipment, the monkeys captured many images, with two of them resulting in the disputed monkey selfie photo.
The photographer argued that he set up the gear and the circumstance, so he should be assigned the copyright to the image. However, many expert legal opinions, including that of the US Copyright Office and the UK Intellectual Property Office, said that photographs and artwork created by animals or machines could not own copyright.
But, according toThe Guardian , the UK office added, “the question as to whether the photographer own copyright is more complex. It depends on whether the photographer has made a creative contribution to the work, and this is a decision which must be made by the courts.”
With that, the monkey selfie image was determined to be in the public domain. However, David Slater still claims the copyright of the photo.
Given this precedent, works that aren’t strictly made by a human are ineligible for copyright; unless the creator can sufficiently prove that they set up the situation in which the non-human entity created the piece.
- Title: Understanding AI Oversight: Identifying Key Players in Regulatory Frameworks
- Author: Larry
- Created at : 2024-08-15 20:53:23
- Updated at : 2024-08-16 20:53:23
- Link: https://tech-hub.techidaily.com/understanding-ai-oversight-identifying-key-players-in-regulatory-frameworks/
- License: This work is licensed under CC BY-NC-SA 4.0.