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Supreme Court AI copyright decision sounds sweeping but actually settles very little
AI inventor Stephen Thaler wanted the US Supreme Court to recognize a machine as the sole author of an image. The court refused, but the ruling only covers this extreme case. It says nothing about...
The Decoder··~4 min read
2-Minute Brief
According to The Decoder: AI inventor Stephen Thaler wanted the US Supreme Court to recognize a machine as the sole author of an image. The court refused, but the ruling only covers this extreme case. It says nothing about whether people can claim copyright for work they create with AI tools. The article Supreme Court AI copyright decision sounds sweeping but actually settles very little appeared first on The Decoder .
Supreme Court AI copyright decision sounds sweeping but actually settles very little
TLDR
AI inventor Stephen Thaler wanted the US Supreme Court to recognize a machine as the sole author of an image. The court refused, but the ruling only covers this extreme case. It says nothing about...
2-Minute Brief
According to The Decoder: AI inventor Stephen Thaler wanted the US Supreme Court to recognize a machine as the sole author of an image. The court refused, but the ruling only covers this extreme case. It says nothing about whether people can claim copyright for work they create with AI tools. The article Supreme Court AI copyright decision sounds sweeping but actually settles very little appeared first on The Decoder .