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When AI Creates, Who Owns It? (of GitHub Copilot Lawsuit)
Who deserves credit when a machine creates something remarkable?
- Is it the coder who programmed the algorithm?
- The artist whose work inspired the AI’s output?
- Or does creativity lose its ownership altogether when filtered through a machine?
These questions lie at the heart of one of the most complex debates of our time.
Generative AI—systems that craft art, write text, and even code—is revolutionizing every industry imaginable.
The potential is undeniable, from automating tedious workflows to sparking new forms of creative expression.
Yet, as the technology grows, so do its challenges, and none are as pressing as the question of ownership.
When an AI-generated creation goes viral, wins awards, or earns millions, who really owns it?
The Lawsuit That Could Change Everything
At the center of this debate is a class-action lawsuit filed against GitHub Copilot.
Copilot is a powerful AI coding assistant trained on millions of lines of code from public repositories.
It’s designed to predict and generate code as developers type, sometimes completing…