The Law Just Took a Stand for Human-Made Art
Big news for every artist in this community — and it's actually good news.
The U.S. Copyright Office has officially confirmed that works created entirely by artificial intelligence cannot receive copyright protection under current law. Shortly after, the U.S. Supreme Court declined to hear an appeal from computer scientist Stephen Thaler, who argued that an AI system should be able to hold copyright over its own work. The court's refusal effectively closes the door on AI systems ever being recognized as legal copyright holders.
In plain terms: AI art can't be owned. Human art can.
This matters more than it might seem.
What it means for you
Your work — made by your hand, your mind, your creative decisions — carries legal protection that AI-generated images simply cannot. When you sign your name to something, you own it. Completely. No algorithm can claim the same.
For collectors, this creates a clear distinction. Human-made work has legal standing, cultural value, and authenticity that AI output fundamentally lacks. That gap is only going to widen.
The line the law is drawing
The Copyright Office did leave one nuance: works that combine human creativity with AI tools may still qualify for protection — but only if the human contribution is substantial. The AI is treated like a tool (similar to Photoshop or a camera), not a creator.
This means artists who use AI as part of their process still have a path to protection. But it puts the human firmly back at the center of what gets protected.
Why this community exists
This is exactly why spaces like The Human-Made Art Society matter. The cultural and now legal distinction between human-made and AI-generated work is becoming one of the defining conversations of our time.
Your commitment to human creativity isn't just philosophical — it's increasingly backed by the law.
Keep making things with your hands. It matters more than ever.
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Sources: U.S. Copyright Office "Copyright and Artificial Intelligence" report (March 2026); Reuters, "US Supreme Court declines to hear dispute over copyrights for AI-generated material" (March 2, 2026)

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