AI Prompts and Copyright: Who is the Author?

This is an interesting question in the current age of artificial intelligence. Generative AI tools, like ChatGPT, Google Gemini, DALL-E, and Claude makes it easy to create videos, images, coding, and more content. One important question continues: Who is the author of AI prompts and the results?

Copyright currently protects original works of human authorship. AI itself cannot be an author. There must be more than just pure AI-generated content. There should be substantial human creative control to protect it as original work.

Are AI Prompts Copyrightable?

Currently, an AI prompt can be copyrighted–but usually only as text, net as ownership of the output.

For example:

If you write:

“Cinematic golden-hour desert scene, 35 mm lens, soft haze, women in flowing dresses dancing, high quality lighting, hyperrealistic, shallow depth of field”

This text may qualify as copyrightable literary expression, if it’s considered sufficiently original.

Consider the following AI prompts examples:

Minimal Prompt

Example: Generate a fantasy castle.

What is the likely result?

Sample AI prompt output
  • No copyright protection
  • Considered machine-generated
  • No human authorship

Detailed Prompt

Example:

  • Custom prompt engineering
  • Refinement over 20 generations
  • Selection of final image
  • Color grading and retouching
  • Manual Photoshop compositing

What is the likely result?

  • More detailed human creative direction
  • Selection and arrangement
  • Post-production editing

The more human creative control, the stronger the authorship claim.

Here are the types of prompts that can be protected under copyright law:

  • Original written prompt collections
  • Prompt guides
  • Prompt books
  • Educational materials about prompting

 

 

2 responses to “AI Prompts and Copyright: Who is the Author?”

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