
Elisa Shupe, an author, faced initial rejection from the US Copyright Office when she attempted to copyright a book co-written with the AI tool, ChatGPT. However, the Copyright Office recently revised its stance, granting Shupe a 'compilation' copyright specifically for the 'selection, coordination, and arrangement of text' in the novel. This decision marks a significant development in the evolving field of AI and copyright law, potentially setting a precedent for how AI-assisted works are treated legally.

Author granted copyright over book with AI-generated textโwith a twist https://t.co/sWuuauEvLE
How one author gained a limited copyright for the "selection, coordination, and arrangement of text" from AI, as the US Copyright Office wrestles with AI law (@knibbs / Wired) https://t.co/jrlr0BKAzl ๐ซ Subscribe: https://t.co/OyWeKSRpIM https://t.co/IFTlgI0ufV
The Copyright Office just awarded "compilation" copyright to a novel written with ChatGPT. I went behind-the-scenes in what may be the new blueprint for AI-heavy works getting registered: https://t.co/xWlze0suVn