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PA Lawmakers Eye Bold Copyright Shift for AI Art

Drawing the Line on Digital Creation

The Pennsylvania House Communications and Technology Committee is sending shockwaves through the intellectual property world by urging Congress to declare AI-generated artwork explicitly non-copyrightable. Lawmakers argue that AI, unlike humans, lacks the originality and intentionality traditionally required for copyright protection. This resolution spearheads a national conversation about how creative rights intersect with machine-made content. The committee hopes Congress will act swiftly to uphold human authorship as the foundation of U.S. copyright law.

Artists vs. Algorithms

At the heart of the resolution is a growing concern over the protection of human artists. Lawmakers fear that copyrighting AI-generated content could flood the creative economy with algorithm-made works, undercutting genuine human creators. By preemptively denying copyright to AI art, policymakers aim to safeguard artistic integrity while giving regulators time to catch up with emerging technology. It’s a clear message: human creativity still matters most.

Joshuva Tovuor

Joshua Tovuor is the Chief Editor at BytesWall, bringing over 7 years of cybersecurity expertise from roles at NASA and the U.S. Air Force. With a Master’s in Cyber Engineering and certifications like CISA and CompTIA Security+, he focuses on cybersecurity, AI in defense, and tech leadership.

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