this post was submitted on 21 Aug 2023
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It seems that's not the case, no matter how much effort or time you expend on the prompts. This is from the Copyright Office:
Here's another key factor:
This only applies to an image generated with AI prompts that isn't significantly altered by an artist.
That is a far more interesting read and more damning than what all these article are talking about - the Thaler v. Perlmutter case.
This is a lot more relevant to most people’s workflows, but even it reads like it wouldn’t apply to someone using processes that allow them more control, e.g., a Stable Diffusion workflow using multiple iterations; ControlNet with author-created posing; in-painting with directed img2img prompts for additional control; additional directives that restrict the creative output in a particular domain, e.g., the palette or lighting type, to an author-provided set; and most of all, AI-free post-processing.