The rise of generative artificial intelligence tools have dramatically altered the creative landscape, essentially enabling an amateur hobbyist with access to a computer.
In The Age of AI: And Our Human Future, Henry A. Kissinger, Eric Schmidt, and Daniel Huttenlocher opined that AI is shepherding a world where decisions are made by humans, by machines, or through an unfamiliar but also unprecedented collaboration between them. As co-authors ourselves, we know firsthand that it can be difficult to ensure that human collaborators feel their voices are fairly represented, or that labor is shared equally. But why is creative collaboration between humans and machines (qua Artificial Intelligence) so difficult?
Over the past year, we have seen a dramatic increase in the adoption of AI technologies across industries. Because transactions involving AI technologies can resemble those involving.
Discussions held over the past several months regarding authorship of AI-generated works have suffered from at least two things 1) an outsized focus on whether the users of commercially.