Reed Smith Client Alerts

Key takeaways

  • Copyright protection in United States requires human authorship and remains available where AI functions as an assistive tool
  • According to the Copyright Office, prompts alone do not provide sufficient human control to make AI users the authors of AI-generated outputs
  • The Copyright Office views existing legal doctrines as adequate to resolve questions of copyrightability of AI-generated outputs

Introduction

The U.S. Copyright Office has released part two of its Report on Copyright and Artificial Intelligence. The report, which is being published in three parts, addresses the legal and policy issues related to artificial intelligence (AI) and copyright. Part one of the report, which was published on July 31, 2024, focused on digital replicas (i.e., deepfakes). Part two addresses the copyrightability of works created using generative AI, focusing on the necessary human contribution for such works to qualify for copyright protection. Part three of the report, which is anticipated later this year, will address the training of AI models on copyrighted works, licensing considerations and allocation of any liability.

The report is a culmination of extensive research and public engagement. Following an August 2023 notice of inquiry, the Copyright Office received over 10,000 comments from a diverse range of stakeholders, including authors, composers, performers, artists, publishers, producers, lawyers, academics, technology companies and public interest organizations. This input, along with additional research and information from other agencies, forms the basis of the report’s discussion and recommendations.

Copyrightability and the human authorship requirement

Human authorship requirement

The report reaffirms the foundational principle that copyright protection in the United States requires human authorship. This principle is rooted in the Copyright Clause of the U.S. Constitution and has been consistently upheld by courts, including as recently as 2023. See Thaler v. Perlmutter, 687 F. Supp. 3d 140, 146 (D.D.C. 2023) (holding that the “key” to copyright protection is “human involvement in, and ultimate creative control over, the work at issue”). The report emphasizes that purely AI-generated material, without sufficient human control over the expressive elements, is not eligible for copyright protection.