Ipr In Valuation Of AI-Generated Art Assets.

1. Introduction to IPR in AI-Generated Art

Artificial Intelligence (AI) can now generate paintings, music, designs, and literary works. The legal question arises: Who owns the copyright? This has a direct impact on the valuation of AI-generated art, because intellectual property rights often determine market value.

Key points:

Traditional copyright law protects human authorship, not machines.

Ownership affects licensing, resale, and commercial exploitation of AI-generated art.

Several jurisdictions are debating whether AI-generated works should receive copyright protection and if so, who holds it (developer, user, or AI itself).

2. Case Laws and Legal Principles

Case 1: Naruto v. Slater (Monkey Selfie, 2018, U.S.)

Facts: Photographer David Slater’s camera was used by a monkey, Naruto, to take selfies. Naruto claimed copyright.

Court Ruling: The U.S. courts ruled that animals cannot hold copyright; copyright is reserved for humans.

Implication for AI Art:

AI is like “non-human authorship” in this context. AI-generated works, without human creative input, may not be eligible for copyright.

Valuation of purely AI-generated art may be lower because no one can claim exclusive ownership.

Case 2: Thaler v. Commissioner of Patents (DABUS AI, 2021–2022, Australia & UK)

Facts: Dr. Stephen Thaler listed an AI system (DABUS) as the inventor for patent applications.

Ruling:

Australia initially allowed patents listing AI as inventor (for certain cases).

UK and US rejected it, stating inventor must be human.

Implication for AI Art:

Patent law reasoning aligns with copyright—AI cannot be an inventor/author.

Human intervention is needed for AI-generated art to have IPR protection, which in turn influences its market valuation.

Case 3: Feist Publications, Inc. v. Rural Telephone Service Co. (1991, U.S.)

Facts: Rural Telephone argued their phone directory was protected under copyright. Feist published a directory with similar listings.

Ruling: Supreme Court held copyright requires originality, not just effort.

Implication for AI Art:

If an AI generates art without creative human input, it may fail the originality requirement, making it uncopyrightable.

Valuation depends heavily on the human creative contribution, not the AI output alone.

Case 4: Monkey Selfie & Human Contribution in Europe (EUIPO Guidelines)

Facts: EU Intellectual Property Office (EUIPO) emphasized that AI cannot be an author; only human creativity counts.

Implication:

To value AI-generated art, we assess the extent of human involvement in directing, modifying, or curating AI output.

Purely AI-generated works without human direction might have no IP value, lowering market price.

Case 5: Thaler v. Commissioner of Patents (U.S. Appeal, 2022)

Facts: Thaler attempted to patent AI-generated inventions in the US.

Ruling: US courts rejected the patent application, stating AI cannot be inventor under the U.S. Patent Act.

Implication:

Reinforces the notion that AI alone cannot own IP rights, affecting valuation models.

Market tends to favor AI-assisted art where humans can claim authorship.

Case 6: Warhol Foundation v. Goldsmith (2021, U.S.)

Facts: Andy Warhol used a photograph of Prince to create a series of artworks. Photographer Goldsmith claimed infringement.

Ruling: Court emphasized transformation and creativity, but recognized underlying copyright.

Implication for AI Art:

If AI transforms an existing copyrighted work, valuation must account for risk of infringement.

Market value can be diminished if the AI art is derivative without proper licensing.

Case 7: Thaler v. Commissioner of Patents (UK, 2022)

Facts: Same as above but in UK.

Ruling: AI cannot be listed as inventor; patents must have a human inventor.

Implication for valuation:

Human attribution in AI-generated works is crucial for legal enforceability, which directly impacts their monetary value.

3. Summary Table of Legal Implications for Valuation

CaseKey PrincipleImpact on AI Art Valuation
Naruto v. SlaterNon-human cannot hold copyrightPure AI art may have little legal value
DABUS (AU/UK/US)Inventor/author must be humanHuman input increases IP and market value
Feist v. RuralOriginality requiredOnly creative AI-human collaborations may be valuable
Warhol v. GoldsmithTransformation vs. derivative workRisk of infringement affects pricing/licensing
EUIPO GuidelinesAI output not automatically copyrightedHuman involvement is crucial for valuation

4. Key Takeaways for Valuation

Ownership Matters: Only works attributed to humans have enforceable IP rights, which increases market value.

Human Contribution: The more creative direction a human provides, the higher the potential valuation.

Derivative Risk: AI-generated art based on existing works carries licensing or infringement risk, reducing its value.

Jurisdictional Differences: Australia, US, EU, and UK treat AI-generated works differently, affecting international valuation strategies.

Licensing Models: Where AI art cannot be copyrighted, NFT or open-license models may be used, but legal enforceability is weaker.

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