The concept of Artificial Intelligence (AI) is revolutionizing the process of knowledge creation and innovation. In such areas as art, music, writing articles, and conducting scientific research, machines have shown themselves to be highly adept at producing output which resembles human creativity. Though such progress provides great prospects for future economic development, it creates many issues related to IPR, including ownership and authorship of AI products.
The creation of intellectual property laws was based on the idea that creativity and innovations result from human intelligence. Copyright laws provide protection to literary, artistic, and musical creations made by people, whereas patents reward inventors for their innovations and creations that are new and useful. Nevertheless, the rising capacity of AI to create content and innovate poses a challenge to these laws.
Among many questions, the question that comes into the spotlight is the one of authorship. Who should be considered an author of any work when it was created by an AI without much contribution from a person – the user, who gave the prompt or the developer of an AI itself? Should the latter not be even copyrighted?
The focus is placed on human creativity as the basis for receiving copyright protection by many countries. In such cases, the question of copyright protection arises for the works generated solely through the help of AI. It becomes highly important for various businesses that use the AI tool.
Patent law is equally faced by such problems. Unlike before where AI was used for automating activities, it is now being utilized in making scientific breakthroughs and products. The issue gained worldwide recognition when patents were applied to inventions credited to AI technology, which goes by the name of Device for the Autonomous Bootstrapping of Unified Sentience (DABUS). The patent agencies in different jurisdictions refused to allow the filing of those applications, claiming that only human beings qualify to be regarded as inventors.
Another issue centres around the data employed in the training of AI algorithms. Generative AI depends upon huge amounts of data, which include text, images, audio, and many more forms of content, a lot of which might be copyrighted. Artists, authors, publishers, and media houses have been raising doubts about whether their creations can be employed without permission and payment in the training of AI. On the other hand, technology firms believe that large sets of data are needed for innovation and certain uses are covered under legal exceptions.
Therefore, the challenge in this case is striking a balance between the interests of the innovators and the necessity of stimulating technological advancement. Overly harsh laws may impede technology, while too lenient laws might not motivate innovators to create anything new.
Worldwide, both government agencies and international bodies are currently studying the issue of how intellectual property law needs to adapt to the challenges posed by AI. World Intellectual Property Organization (WIPO) discussions and regulations in different countries show increasing awareness of the need to update current legislation. Issues like owner definitions, licensing, transparency, and protection of rights are among those under consideration.
This problem is especially important to India. India is a developing economy and is one of the fastest growing digital economies in the world. It is quickly moving towards the integration of AI in various fields including education, health, governance, banking and legal sectors. While the Indian system of IP rights offers great protection to human creators and inventors, there is not much legal advice about creations made by AI technologies.
The role of intellectual property law is therefore to promote innovation in a way that ensures that creators are acknowledged and rewarded for their efforts. However, in the era of artificial intelligence, attaining such a goal will necessitate a re-examination of the traditional notions of authorship, ownership and inventorship. Instead of viewing AI technology as a threat to intellectual property, the law ought to take advantage of this
With AI changing industries and even the very concept of creativity, there is an acute need for an IP regime that reflects the balance and forward-thinking approach of the age. The future of innovation is no longer just about new technologies, but also about the capacity of legal systems to keep up with the age when humans and machines think together.
Author is a Dean at Birla School of Law. Views are personal.