Prompting the E-Brushes: Users as Authors in Generative AI
Yiyang Mei

TL;DR
This paper argues for recognizing users as authors of AI-generated art, emphasizing their active role in shaping outputs and proposing a flexible registration process to adapt to technological advances.
Contribution
It challenges existing copyright policies by highlighting user influence in AI art creation and advocates for a streamlined registration process recognizing user contributions.
Findings
Users actively influence AI-generated outputs through interaction.
Current policies overlook the dynamic role of users in AI art.
Proposes a flexible, adaptive copyright framework for AI-generated works.
Abstract
Since its introduction in 2022, Generative AI has significantly impacted the art world, from winning state art fairs to creating complex videos from simple prompts. Amid this renaissance, a pivotal issue emerges: should users of Generative AI be recognized as authors eligible for copyright protection? The Copyright Office, in its March 2023 Guidance, argues against this notion. By comparing the prompts to clients' instructions for commissioned art, the Office denies users authorship due to their limited role in the creative process. This Article challenges this viewpoint and advocates for the recognition of Generative AI users who incorporate these tools into their creative endeavors. It argues that the current policy fails to consider the intricate and dynamic interaction between Generative AI users and the models, where users actively influence the output through a process of…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAI in Service Interactions · Semantic Web and Ontologies · FinTech, Crowdfunding, Digital Finance
