rnviewjthpowrh

@[email protected]

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rnviewjthpowrh,

It is good, like eating a buttered roll but crunchy.

rnviewjthpowrh,

So if I use a hammer to create art I can’t protect it because I used a hammer? Exchange hammer for AI

Only if it is some sort auto-magic hammer that you can give a description of what you want, but the hammer actually decides what the final piece of art looks like and produces it on the medium without you needing to make the strikes.

Now if you took the output of that auto-magic hammer and than significantly reworked it to meet your vision, that derivative output would be copyrightable.

Giving a description of what you want doesn’t count as producing it is what this seems to be saying. Which is not in favor of people who just want to plug random things into a black box to use that black box as a cash machine.

This also means that the person who owns the black box can’t steal ownership of your output by merely being the owner of the black box. This would be equivalent to you leasing a printer and the company you’re leasing it from saying they own anything you print.

So good ruling. You can copyright the output if YOU rework the output, but you can’t copyright the direct output.

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