Get the latest tech news

How One Author Pushed the Limits of AI Copyright


Elisa Shupe was initially rebuffed when she tried to copyright a book she wrote with help from ChatGPT. Now the US Copyright Office has changed course—but there’s a catch.

The agency changed course earlier this month after Shupe appealed, granting her copyright registration for AI Machinations: Tangled Webs and Typed Words, a work of autofiction self-published on Amazon under the pen name Ellen Rae. The appeal built on Shupe’s argument about her disabilities, saying she should be granted copyright because she used ChatGPT as an assistive technology to communicate, comparing her use of OpenAI’s chatbot to an amputee using a prosthetic leg. Matthew Sag, a professor of law and artificial intelligence at Emory University, calls what the USCO granted Shupe “thin copyright”—protection against full-fledged duplication of materials that doesn’t stop someone from rearranging the paragraphs into a different story.

Get the Android app

Or read this on Wired

Read more on:

Photo of author

author

Photo of limits

limits

Photo of AI Copyright

AI Copyright

Related news:

News photo

Meta Says Limits on Sharing AI Technology May Dim US Influence

News photo

Meta’s new opt-out setting limits visibility of politics on Instagram and Threads

News photo

US Cyber Investors Pledge Spyware is Off Limits - With a Catch