this post was submitted on 02 Mar 2026
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ITT: people misunderstanding the issue being ruled on (or rather, not being ruled on by letting the lower court decision stand).
If he had applied for copyright over the image generated using "AI" as a tool, it (edit: probably^2^) would have been granted, with him listed as the human author. But that's not what he wanted. He's apparently Hell-bent on trying to get the work registered in the name of the "AI" system itself as the author, to so that he can claim that the government recognized the "AI" as a sentient being that can ~~own property~~ hold a copyright^1^ on its own behalf.
This is not the broad ruling against AI slop copyrightability that people think it is. It's a ruling against "AI" personhood.
(^1^ Copyright isn't a property right, BTW)
(^2^ He explicitly claimed he gave no creative contribution and that the work was created completely autonomously, and the court's ruling included excluding that from being copyrightable. It is if he hadn't done that -- if he had claimed he had directed it via prompts or whatever -- that I think they would have granted the copyright to him as the human author. It turns out that he changed his mind and did make that argument on appeal, but the court explicitly ignored and did not rule on it because it wasn't raised in his initial complaint.)
on that note:
This is wildly wrong in so many ways.
Copyright is an intellectual property right, firmly grounded in property law doctrine--you are probably thinking of trademark, which is rooted in consumer protection law, or likeness rights which have their roots in privacy law.
The copyrightability of AI generated content gets to where the nexus of creativity happens. Effectively, image generators (modern ones--i actually don't think DABUS is a diffusion model) are operated like a commissioned work. The user gives detailed instruction on par with what you might see in a commissioned work, and the creative event occurs when the "contractor" interprets that into the work. The copyright may be assigned or it may be licensed, in any case, the initial copyright holder is the contractor--or in our case, the model. Now, it is well established that only humans can have sua sponte property rights, including intellectual property right. Those can be assigned, licensed, etc., but they must first inher to a human and so an AI system literally has no copyright to assign, were it even able to engage in a contractual agreement to transfer said rights. As a result, no, there is no copyright in AI generated content and without a significant change in law there is unlikely to ever be any.
If he had sought to register the copyright under purely his own name, he would have been committing a fraud on the copyright office. This wasn't explicitly established at the time of his suit, but it has been very explicitly the case now for over a year. When registering copyright you must declare any AI-generated components. Failure, or refusal, to do so constitutes a fraud on the office and such fraud is sanctionable up to revoking the copyright in the work in its entirety, even if the AI-gen component was only partial. This is really important to note with software copyright and the kind of litigation we're likely to see wrt piracy in the future (i.e., defendant claims plaintiffs did not declare vibe coded components and thus committed a fraud on the office and should be sanctioned with full revocation of the right as a signal to other would-be claimants).
First of all, "Intellectual property[sic]" is a not a thing. There are copyrights, patents, trademarks, and trade secrets, but they are all significantly different from each other. Trying to lump them together under a single term is disingenuous at best, and using the word "property" in that term is biased loaded language.
Second, copyright cannot be a property right because ideas cannot be property. In fact, ideas are essentially the opposite of property, as Thomas Jefferson once pointed out:
What copyright actually is, is a temporary monopoly granted at the whim of Congress. It's a license, not a right.