TPI Aspen in Review: AI and Copyright Policy

TPI Aspen in Review: AI and Copyright Policy

Interview with Register of Copyrights and Director of the U.S. Copyright Office Shira Perlmutter, moderated by University of Minnesota Carlson School of Management Chaired Professor Joel Waldfogel

Key takeaways from the panel:

  1. AI-created digital replicas of real people, often made without consent, are raising significant concerns. 
  2. The Copyright Office maintains that AI-generated content is copyrightable only with significant human involvement. Laws and regulations are being refined to address the complexities of AI-generated works and copyright protection.
  3. Economic analysis is crucial for understanding the tradeoffs and informing copyright policy decisions in the AI era. It helps evaluate how AI might both promote new forms of creativity and potentially displace existing creators.
  4. International cooperation is necessary to address AI and copyright challenges. Perlmutter noted the risk of regulatory arbitrage due to differing copyright rules across jurisdictions.
  5. The Copyright Office grapples with how to handle the question of AI models ingesting copyrighted works for training. It aims to enable efficient AI development while retaining proper incentives for human creativity.

You can watch videos or read full transcripts of each panel, including this one, on TPI’s YouTube channel. Below is a live illustration of this panel provided by graphic artist Karina Branson of CoverSketch. Stay tuned for more panel summaries from 2024’s Aspen Forum!

AI and Copyright Policy

Website |  + posts

Share This Article

View More Publications by

Recommended Reads

Farewell to Limewire?

Research Roundup: File-sharing vs. music sales, Craigslist vs. newspapers, and more

Blog

Health Information Technology, High-Skilled Immigration, and Tax Administration: Radio Interview

Explore More Topics

Antitrust and Competition 178
Artificial Intelligence 29
Big Data 20
Blockchain 29
Broadband 382
China 2
Content Moderation 15
Economics and Methods 35
Economics of Digitization 14
Evidence-Based Policy 18
Free Speech 19
Infrastructure 1
Innovation 2
Intellectual Property 56
Miscellaneous 334
Privacy and Security 136
Regulation 9
Trade 2
Uncategorized 4

Related Articles

Want AI Leadership? Stop Attacking the Science That Creates It

TPI Aspen Forum 2025: Supreme Court and Other Legal Developments

TPI Aspen Forum 2025: Privacy and Governmental Surveillance

National Institutes of Health Director Jay Bhattacharya at TPI Aspen

Does Agentic AI Require New Policy Frameworks?

TPI Aspen Forum 2025: AI & Energy Markets Panel

Ericsson CEO Börje Ekholm at TPI Aspen on the Future of Wireless and Global Connectivity

Universal Service in Transition: BEAD’s New Direction and Beyond

Sign Up for Updates

This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.