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Salt of the Earth: Underground Salt Caverns Just Might Power Our Future

https://eos.org/features/salt-of-the-earth-vast-underground-salt-caverns-are-preserving-our-histo...
1•jofer•1m ago•0 comments

Show HN: Open-sourced an email QA lib 8 checks across 12 clients in 1 audit call

https://github.com/emailens/engine
1•tikkatenders•1m ago•0 comments

Low-Dose Lithium for Mild Cognitive Impairment: Pilot Randomized Clinical Trial

https://jamanetwork.com/journals/jamaneurology/fullarticle/2845746
1•bookofjoe•2m ago•0 comments

Show HN: AfterLive – AI digital legacy that lets loved ones hear from you

https://afterlive.ai
1•crawde•3m ago•0 comments

I Used Claude to File My Taxes for Free

https://kachess.dev/taxes/ai/personal-finance/2026/02/27/breaking-up-with-turbotax.html
1•gdudeman•3m ago•0 comments

Israel bombs council choosing Iran's next supreme leader, official says

https://www.axios.com/2026/03/03/iran-supreme-leader-council-israel-strike
1•spzx•4m ago•0 comments

Software development now costs less than than the wage of a minimum wage worker

https://ghuntley.com/real/
1•herbertl•5m ago•0 comments

A [Firefox, Chromium] extension that converts Microsoft to Microslop

https://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/android/addon/microslop/
2•gaius_baltar•5m ago•0 comments

British Rail settlement plan barcode specs

https://magicalcodewit.ch/rsp-specs/
1•fanf2•5m ago•0 comments

Completing the formal proof of higher-dimensional sphere packing

https://www.math.inc/sphere-packing
1•carnevalem•6m ago•0 comments

Show HN: Verifiable Interaction Records for Agents

https://github.com/peacprotocol/peac
1•jithinraj•8m ago•0 comments

Ohio EPA weighs allowing data centers to dump wastewater into rivers

https://www.nbc4i.com/news/local-news/columbus/ohio-epa-weighs-allowing-data-centers-to-release-w...
1•randycupertino•9m ago•1 comments

What if LLM uptime was a macroeconomic indicator?

https://lab.sideband.pub/status/
1•shawnyeager•9m ago•0 comments

Watch Out Bluetooth Analysis of the Coros Pace 3 (2025)

https://blog.syss.com/posts/bluetooth-analysis-coros-pace-3/
1•lqueenan•9m ago•0 comments

Risk, in Perspective

https://faingezicht.com/articles/2026/03/02/risk-in-perspective/
1•avyfain•10m ago•0 comments

No mentor? Learn from a 16th century French nobleman

https://www.magicreader.com/montaigne
1•mzelling•10m ago•0 comments

Show HN: I built a way to prove your software kept its promises

https://github.com/nobulexdev/nobulex
1•arian_•11m ago•0 comments

How do I market myself as a freelance Backend/Infrastructure engineer?

1•__0x01•11m ago•0 comments

The Limits of Today's AI Systems

2•Yinfan•11m ago•0 comments

Accept-Language Redirects Could Be Blocking Search Engines and AI Crawlers

https://merj.com/blog/your-accept-language-redirects-could-be-blocking-search-engines-and-ai-craw...
1•giacomoz•11m ago•0 comments

Is Unbound AI Video the most uncensored AI model in 2026?

https://unbound.video
1•gabrieln•11m ago•1 comments

Drizzle Joins PlanetScale

https://planetscale.com/blog/drizzle-joins-planetscale
3•alexblokh•12m ago•1 comments

Political market entropy in Rome. An analysis of different electoral cycles

https://www.frontiersin.org/journals/political-science/articles/10.3389/fpos.2026.1744381/full
1•PaulHoule•12m ago•0 comments

Show HN: Readme badge to quickly find related open source repos

https://relatedrepos.com/badge
1•plurch•12m ago•0 comments

Apollo sued for allegedly concealing Epstein business ties from shareholders

https://www.reuters.com/sustainability/boards-policy-regulation/apollo-leon-black-sued-allegedly-...
1•petethomas•13m ago•0 comments

Free Software Needs Free Tools: Making Your Project Open

https://cfp.cfgmgmtcamp.org/ghent2026/talk/LHWU8T/
2•Tomte•14m ago•1 comments

Show HN: A Write Barrier That Blocks Structural Collapse in LLM Reasoning

1•persistentVlad•14m ago•1 comments

Show HN: Exodus – we tracked 240 moves across companies to map the AI talent war

https://7min.ai/exodus/
1•fabioperez•15m ago•0 comments

Designing Search Experiences

1•CShorten•15m ago•0 comments

Deploy from GitHub Actions without Storing Secrets (Using OIDC)

https://www.even.li/posts/2026-03-03-deploy-github-actions-without-storing-secrets-using-oidc/
1•n_e•17m ago•0 comments
Open in hackernews

AI-generated art can't be copyrighted (Supreme Court declines review)

https://www.theverge.com/policy/887678/supreme-court-ai-art-copyright
58•duggan•1h ago

Comments

hermannj314•1h ago
Initialize an algorithm to point your camera at the street and write those bytes to disk and you are the author of a perpetual stream of data.

Initialize an algorithm to point your camera at the street and describe those bytes in words and you are no longer the author a perpetual stream of data.

In a world where slapping an overlay of someone looking incredulous over someone else's video is considered "adding substantive commentary" by every major video sharing platform, I don't even try to understand copyright law at all. It is way over my head.

dathinab•58m ago
> slapping an overlay of someone looking incredulous over someone else's video is considered

it really isn't, you actually have to provide enough relevant commentary for it to be transformative

it just looks like that because

- not every claim leads to a take down, more common is that the advertisement revenue is redirected to the owner of the original video. That is very very common, especially on YT, but not really visible as viewer.

- there are enough copyright holders which overall tolerate reactions, even if they don't fall under fair use.

- Sometimes people claim it doesn't fall under fair use when they don't like how the reaction is done, but that doesn't mean it wouldn't be ruled fair uses if it came in front of court.

- Sometimes people reacting have explicit permission from the original author to do so, no matter if it counts as fair use or not.

and maybe most relevant here, pretty much all large platforms have a tendency to favor the person claiming the copyright violation over the person which reacted to it. To a point there is is sometimes a big problem if systematically abused with false claims.

mapt•56m ago
If it makes seven figures of revenue, there is a real system in place to litigate copyright disputes between corporations. Two kaijiu summoned by ritual magic to fight for the future of the franchise / giant pile of money.

Everything else in the entire system is just bits of monster and building falling randomly. We know if we put the whole population under strict scrutiny ("laser eyes" + "lightning wings"), it would kill every last one of them; every teenager is theoretically criminally liable for the GDP of the Milky Way, a series of violations beginning with a performance of The Birthday Song at their first cake day. Even hiring the cheapest defense lawyer would bankrupt nearly any family in the nation. So we try imperfectly to dodge copyright, hopefully by a couple zip codes, and live in a state of nature on the ground.

filoleg•46m ago
Those two examples you listed don’t necessarily work the way you are describing it, which is why the whole logic and mechanisms behind the US copyright laws might seem incomprehensible or illogical to you.

In reality, it is way more complex and less clear-cut. Which makes sense, because oversimplifying it will lead to silly-sounding conclusions and an almost entirely incorrect understanding of how this works.

For those who don’t want to read the actual full explanation (which is a totally normal position, as the explanation is going fairly into the weeds), I will just a put a TLDR summary at the end. I suggest everyone to check out that summary first, and then come back here if there is interest in a more detailed explanation.

----------------------------

First, we gotta settle on 3 key concepts (among many) the US copyright law relies on.

1. Human authorship - self-explanatory; you cannot assign authorship to a fish or your smartphone.

2. Original/minimal creativity - some creative choices, not just "I pressed the button."

3. Fixation - the content needs to be recorded on a tangible medium; you cannot copyright a "mood" or a thought, since those aren’t tangible media.

Now onto your hypothetical scenarios:

1) "Initialize an algorithm to point your camera at the street and write those bytes to disk and you are the author of a perpetual stream of data."

Writing bytes to disk satisfies fixation, but it doesn’t automatically make you the author of a copyrightable work. You gotta satisfy the minimum creativity requirement too (e.g., camera positioning, setup, any other creative choices/actions, etc.). Otherwise you are just running a fully automated security cam feed with zero human input, and those videos aren’t easily copyrightable (if at all). You might own copyright in a video work if there’s sufficient human creative authorship - but mere automated recording doesn’t guarantee that.

2) "Initialize an algorithm to point your camera at the street and describe those bytes in words and you are no longer the author a perpetual stream of data."

This is just close to being plainly incorrect. If you (a human) write a textual description, that text is typically copyrightable as a literary work (assuming it’s not purely mechanical like "frame 1: car, frame 2: another car, etc." with no expressive choices). Creating a description doesn’t erase any copyright you may or may not have had in the underlying recording. They’re just different works (audiovisual work vs. text work).

Important to note: neither makes you the author or owner of the underlying "data" of reality, because copyright protects expression, not the underlying facts.

----------------------------

TLDR:

* Recording the street can produce a copyrightable work if there is human authorship and minimal creativity in how the recording is made. Pure automated capture may fail that.

* Describing the street in words is usually a separate, independently copyrightable work (e.g., a text or audio version of those words), but it doesn’t change the status of the underlying recording.

stavros•1h ago
AI-generated art can't be copyrighted, fine. But what does this mean for the huge spectrum between "I did some fingerpainting" and "Nano Banana spat out this painting"?

What if I use Photoshop and context-aware fill a cloud in? Is that AI-generated or human-generated art?

dathinab•46m ago
most likely counts as AI-assisted art, which is copyrightable with you as the owner

like most things copyright there is a gray area there

but in most cases it's either pretty clear and courts would most likely rule in your (copyright holder) if you somehow manage to hit the perfect middle of the gray area

through if you tell the court "the author is my AI" (like in this case), the outcome is pretty obvious

also for better understanding using AI doesn't erase copyright, it just doesn't add it. So if you image was copyrightable before you used an AI tool to change it will stay copyrightable (as long as the original image is still in there to a reasonable degree).

margalabargala•40m ago
They cover this. It has to have "substantial human authorship".

So if you start with something you truly made, it would be difficult to use so much context aware fill to negate that.

If you start with something AI generated,at what point does it become copywritable? This is less clear.

But that's fine, because the decision does not torpedo anyone's existing Photoshop workflows.

OutOfHere•1h ago
Why is "AI-generated code" not also "AI art"? What makes "AI-generated code" copyrightable then? Nothing! Being that everything will be made using AI in the future, the courts just suicided the copyright system! Or where exactly does art end and code begin? The same applies to documents and designs.

If I take your AI-generated code file and write it as an artsy-looking image, do I get to deny you copyright?

CJefferson•1h ago
No-one has checked in court of AI-generated code is copyrightable.

Personally I hope it's not. To me, this is the best outcome for AI in general. If we are going to violate everyone's copyright training AIs, then it's only fair you don't get AI protection on the output.

dathinab•26m ago
it's about copyrighted content

so yes it applies to fully AI-generated code as much as to "AI art".

like with AI assisted art it doesn't apply to AI assisted coding

and yes if everything is fully AI generate there is no copyright anymore, that is by design!

Copyright is there to protect human creativity/time investment. If there is no creativity/time investment, then there is no reason for copyright to exist either. Having still copyright there would mean moving it from a law to protect creative work to a law to protect the privileged few which can afford to just mass generate "everything" with AI. That isn't just very undesirable, it's kinda plain evil, as it would mean screwing over the majority of humanity.

Naturally as mentioned that only applies to full AI products, not to AI assisted products in which case the "human contribution" and thinks resulting from it still have copyright.

dathinab•1h ago
Long standing well known issue, no copyright (in many countries) and (in some countries) non patentable, too.

Through this isn't true for AI assisted art.

And the gray area is very wide and very legal unclear (gray area between human art with AI assistance (e.g. "AI"/transformer architecture based line smoothing or color calibration) and AI art with human touch added to it).

foltik•1h ago
> Thaler’s request to copyright an image, called A Recent Entrance to Paradise, on behalf of an algorithm he created.

The courts just take issue with him naming his AI system as the sole author and himself as the copyright owner.

If you just copyright it normally with yourself as the author, seems like it would be fine to copyright whatever bs you want?

ahhhhnoooo•1h ago
Claiming that you digitally painted it? (Fraud?)

I mean, I guess lying is something you could do.

reactordev•1h ago
A common technique in paint print shops is to print the piece on canvas, then “add” color to it in globs of acrylic that match, making it stand off from the canvas. A very quick a clever trick to recreate multiples of a piece.
harrall•27m ago
Yeah but it’s super obvious when you pick it up so I don’t know if I would consider it lying.
malfist•24m ago
An easily recognizable lie is still a lie.
youknownothing•12m ago
Photography is a copyrightable art, but don't say that most of the work is actually done by a machine. Or even by the engineer who built the machine. You could argue that the photographer just presses a button and, perhaps, airbrushes it later in photoshop, and yet that's art.
reactordev•1h ago
Bingo. If he was the creator and owner, it would have been fine.
throwaway85825•1h ago
Can you use "I believed this was AI generated" as a copyright defense now?
furyofantares•58m ago
No? Just as you've never been able to use your ignorance as a defense?
RavlaAlvar•1h ago
I wonder by that logic, can AI generated art violate other’s copyright?
dathinab•36m ago
AI usage doesn't remove copyright, it just doesn't gain any new copyright by itself

so a AI based transformation of a copyrighted input is as much a potential copyright violation as a non AI based transformation.

It's just that the human transformation can by potentially itself be seen as art, so if you have a license or fair use you now can have copyright on the transformed peace (with some limitations (1)). And if the transformation is done by AI you won't (but the original authors "partial" copyright on the outcome is still there).

(1): Like if you (human) "transform" a peace of art in 1000 different ways each keeping 0.001% of the original you will likely get 1000x copyright. But if you then use this 1000 peaces you have copyright too to regenerate the original you still have full copyright infringement. In general the law doesn't care about your "trickery" trying to bend laws.

ModernMech•54m ago
Exactly 0 of the artists I know “generate” their images outright - AI generations are always part of a pretty typical artistic workflow.

The way I think of it is this: typical art creation starts from a blank canvas and the artist adds layer upon layer of what you want. Eventually something coherent (to the artist at least) pops out.

AI art starts from a canvas which is filled, and the artist changes the filled canvas to meet their perspective. It’s like those projects where people take a vintage painting and add Pokémon to it. Mostly the people I see using AI art are traditional artists who view it as a new medium in their process, very few “generate” and call it a day.

delichon•52m ago
> The outputs of generative AI can be protected by copyright only where a human author has determined sufficient expressive elements. This can include situations where a human-authored work is perceptible in an AI output, or a human makes creative arrangements or modifications of the output, but not the mere provision of prompts. https://www.copyright.gov/newsnet/2025/1060.html

I think that this means that a single prompt alone does not convey copyright. But if you had spent many hours before the prompt fine tuning the model, or much effort after the prompt shaping the result with further prompts, it could be.

I disagree with this approach because I've seen how much creativity and effort some people can put into slowly evolving a single elaborate prompt. AI can be used as another kind of brush. A prompt can be a masterpiece.

mcmcmc•29m ago
> AI can be used as another kind of brush. A prompt can be a masterpiece

What a joke. No, AI is not a brush, it is a slop machine that spits out derivatives of the actual masters. If you go back and forth with a human artist about a commission where you keep nitpicking and wanting adjustments, does that make you the artist? No, it makes you the “ideas guy”

betaby•15m ago
> spits out derivatives of the actual masters

A brief history of art in general.

camillomiller•6m ago
Fuck this nonsense. Go study art instead of repeating shallow AI propaganda.
charcircuit•23s ago
Let's say the AI prompt is "Make it black and white". Why does taking a photo and making it gray scale in photoshop result in a copyrightable piece of art, but using an AI model makes the resulting output slop that can't be copyrighted?
elil17•26m ago
I don't think this is the correct interpretation. I think they mean that if you make something without AI and then modify that with AI, that's covered. Likewise, if you start from an AI output and modify it, that's covered.

But the pure output of a generative model cannot be copyrighted, regardless of how complex the prompt is (note that the prompt itself could be copyrighted).

camillomiller•8m ago
>> I disagree with this approach because I've seen how much creativity and effort some people can put into slowly evolving a single elaborate prompt. AI can be used as another kind of brush. A prompt can be a masterpiece.

Absolute nonsense. A work of art is made of semantic stratification, experience, thought process. A prompt lacks all that. AI art can be a tool, but this sentence is a good reminder that on average it’s worth shit all.

thedangler•38m ago
does that mean movies with AI generated art can be repackaged and sold by anyone?
kirykl•33m ago
Add a single pixel manually
AndrewDucker•28m ago
You then own the copyright on that pixel.
simonw•24m ago
I feel like the more important question here is whether AI-generated code can be copyrighted.

Companies responsible for several billion dollars worth of software written over the past ~36 months would really like to know the answer to that one.

yorwba•16m ago
It doesn't really matter as long as you keep physical control of the code and don't let others copy it.