Artificial Creations: Ascription, Ownership, Time-Specific Monopolies
Raj Shekhar (Institute of Public Policy, National Law School of India, University, Bengaluru)

TL;DR
This paper examines how intellectual property laws should adapt to artificial creators producing autonomous creative works, analyzing the justifications for IP rights and proposing modalities for artificial creations.
Contribution
It offers a critical analysis of IP regimes in the context of artificial creativity and proposes new modalities for granting IP rights to artificial works and inventions.
Findings
Identifies the need to adapt IP laws for artificial creations
Proposes modalities for granting IP rights to artificial works
Critiques current IP treatment of artificial inventions
Abstract
Creativity has always been synonymous with humans. No other living species could boast of creativity as humans could. Even the smartest computers thrived only on the ingenious imaginations of its coders. However, that is steadily changing with highly advanced artificially intelligent systems that demonstrate incredible capabilities to autonomously (i.e., with minimal or no human input) produce creative products that would ordinarily deserve intellectual property status if created by a human. These systems could be called artificial creators and their creative products artificial creations. The use of artificial creators is likely to become a part of mainstream production practices in the creative and innovation industries sooner than we realize. When they do, intellectual property regimes (that are inherently designed to reward human creativity) must be sufficiently prepared to aptly…
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