An AI generated woman looks at the viewer.

 

US Copyright Office Rejected an AI-generated piece last February.

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Claiming that it needs to be created by humans. That hasn't prevented AI enthusiasts from attempting to legalize art theft. Last year,

one creator tried yesterday to register a comic book with an image they created in the AI tool Midjourney. That creator has received an official decision on possible copyright.

Comics will be protected for text and composition. Both are created by humans. However, images created by AI software are not copyrighted.

Still, creator Kris Kashtanova is trying to frame it as a victory for the AI community. Kashtanova tweeted that Zarya of the Dawn has a "confirmed" copyright, though that's not the whole thing.

According to a letter from the Copyright Office, Kashtanova did not disclose the use of Midjourney software when applying for copyright registrations last year. The new partial copyright is intended to replace

the old copyright covering the entire work. The letter states that the new ruling is a more "limited" version, so the decision is a huge blow to AI advocates who hope their work will be protected by US copyright law.