What if AI Accidentally Copies Someone Else’s Work?
Dear Will & AiME,
Our marketing team uses AI to generate blog posts. What happens if AI accidentally copies someone else’s work?
— Content Manager in New York
Dear Content Manager in New York,
AI-generated content is a great tool for efficiency, but it comes with copyright risks. AI models are trained on vast datasets, which may include copyrighted material. If an AI-generated blog post closely resembles existing work, your company could face copyright infringement claims.
What You Need to Know
Copyright law protects original human-created works, and AI does not have the ability to create something truly independent of its training data. Risks include:
Unintentional copying – AI may produce content that closely mirrors copyrighted material.
No clear legal protections – Since AI-generated works lack human authorship, they may not qualify for copyright protection.
Potential liability – Even if copying is unintentional, your company could still be held responsible.
How to Reduce Infringement Risks
To avoid legal trouble, follow these best practices:
Use AI as a Drafting Tool
Have a human writer review, edit, and add original input to ensure the content is transformative.Run Plagiarism Checks
Use tools to detect similarities with existing works before publishing AI-generated content.Obtain Proper Licensing
If AI pulls from copyrighted sources, make sure your company has the right to use and modify that content.
By taking these steps, you can harness AI for content creation while minimizing copyright risks.
-Will & AiME
Three Takeaways:
AI-generated content can unintentionally infringe on copyrights.
Human review and editing are essential to avoid copyright risks.
Use plagiarism checks and licensing agreements to protect your company.