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Could an Artificial Intelligence be a Ghostwriter?

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Title Statement Could an Artificial Intelligence be a Ghostwriter?
 
Added Entry - Uncontrolled Name Nowak-Gruca, Aleksandra Joanna
The paper was created as a result of the research project no. 2018/31/D/HS5/00754 financed by the National Science Centre of Poland
 
Uncontrolled Index Term Ghostwriting; Artificial Intelligence; Creative AI systems; GPT-3; Copyright Law; EU Copyright System; Berne Convention
 
Summary, etc. Advanced technologies, such as Artificial Intelligence (AI) systems, have been pushing nowadays societies toward new ethical and legal challenges, including copyright law dilemmas.The contemporary development of innovative machines and cognitive technologies raises the need to rethink basic concepts such as ownership and accountability.In light of the rules of copyright law, this paper argues that innovative algorithms, such as GPT-3 (an autoregressive language model developed by Open AI to produce human-like text via deep learning), could be considered a modern form of ghostwriting brought forward by the Third Industrial Revolution, as defined by Jeremy Rifkin. The phenomenon of ghostwriting has been notorious sinceantiquity. Although ghost writing is also today, neither national nor international legal systems have yet fully regulated it. Based on the assumption that AI systems operate like ghost writers in terms of their creativity, this paper asks whether AI’s creation should be subject to copyright regulations soon, and if so, to what extent.
 
Publication, Distribution, Etc. Journal of Intellectual Property Rights (JIPR)
2022-08-02 10:26:39
 
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http://op.niscair.res.in/index.php/JIPR/article/view/51259
 
Data Source Entry Journal of Intellectual Property Rights (JIPR); ##issue.vol## 27, ##issue.no## 1 (2022): Journal of Intellectual Property Rights
 
Language Note en