A Defining Moment for Artificial Intelligence and Intellectual Property
In a significant decision on 2 March 2026, the US Supreme Court declined to hear a legal dispute over whether works generated entirely by artificial intelligence can be protected by copyright under US law. This refusal leaves intact existing interpretations from lower courts and the US Copyright Office that require “human authorship” for creative works to qualify for copyright protection. The case concerned visual artwork produced by an AI system and raised profound questions about the intersection of law, technology, and creative expression.
The case originated when Stephen Thaler, a computer scientist from Missouri, sought federal copyright registration for a piece of visual art titled A Recent Entrance to Paradise, which he argued was autonomously created by his AI system named DABUS. The US Copyright Office rejected the application in 2022 on the basis that copyright law only protects works with human authors, a position upheld by a federal judge in Washington in 2023 and later by the US Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit in 2025.
What the Supreme Court Decision Means
The Supreme Court’s choice not to review the case known as a denial of certiorari does not represent a ruling on the merits of AI copyrights itself. Rather, it means that the legal understanding developed in prior rulings will remain in force. Because the highest court did not take up the dispute, the appeals court’s interpretation stands: a creative work must have a human author to be eligible for copyright protection.
The Copyright Office maintains that the Copyright Act presumes human authorship because it ties copyright ownership to human creators. Elements of the law such as copyright duration being linked to an author’s lifetime, and termination rights that benefit heirs cannot logically apply to non-human entities like machines, according to government filings supporting the decision.
Legal experts and industry observers have described this outcome as a reaffirmation of the traditional legal framework at a time when artificial intelligence is rapidly reshaping creative industries. Some contend that the courts’ insistence on human authorship ensures that intellectual property rights remain anchored in human creativity, while others fear it could limit incentives for developers working with generative AI technologies.
Background: Human Authorship and AI in Law
Under US copyright law, creative works must be protected from unauthorized copying and exploitation. The Copyright Act of 1976 does not explicitly define “author,” but longstanding interpretations hold that this term refers to a human being. The Copyright Office regularly rejects applications for works it deems lacking such authorship.
The legal challenges involving AI have been growing in recent years, as generative models like Midjourney, DALL-E, and others produce images, music, and written text that can be visually and conceptually compelling. In Thaler’s case, the argument was that the AI system itself without meaningful human creative direction was responsible for generating the artistic work, challenging the foundational tenet that copyright flows only from human creativity.
Lower courts reinforced this position, with the appeals court in Washington describing human authorship as a “bedrock requirement of copyright.” Thaler’s legal team argued that such rulings could chill innovation and discourage investment in AI creative tools. But with the Supreme Court’s non-intervention, these arguments remain unresolved at the highest level of US law.
Implications for Artists, Developers and AI Tools
The Supreme Court’s decision to steer clear of the case does not settle all questions about AI and copyright, but it does establish a clear message: current copyright protections in the United States remain tied to human creative input. This affects artists who employ AI as a tool, companies that build generative systems, and the future landscape of creative industries experimenting with emerging technologies.
Creators who use AI assistants to make art or other original works can still obtain copyright protection if there is sufficient human creative contribution in the process such as selecting, arranging, or manipulating AI outputs in a way that reflects personal artistic choices. The Copyright Office has issued guidance reinforcing this principle, noting that AI-generated content on its own is not eligible for copyright without demonstrable human involvement.
At the same time, policy makers and tech industry representatives continue to debate how the law should adapt to rapid technological change. Some argue for new legal frameworks that explicitly address AI-generated content, while others believe existing laws can be applied with careful interpretation. For now, creators and developers must operate within the current legal landscape that prioritises human authorship.
Future Legal Questions and the Evolving AI Era
While this Supreme Court decision leaves the status quo in place, it does not preclude future legal challenges that might test the boundaries of intellectual property law in the age of AI. Cases involving how AI training data is used, whether generative AI outputs can be considered “fair use,” and how AI inventions are treated under patent law continue to work their way through lower courts. Previous rulings, including decisions on AI patent inventorship, indicate ongoing legal uncertainty in this developing domain.
As artificial intelligence becomes more sophisticated and embedded in creative and technical fields, questions about ownership, attribution, and economic rights will remain at the forefront of legal debates. Governments and legal systems around the world are considering updates to copyright laws and regulatory frameworks. The outcome of these discussions could have far-reaching impacts on artists, innovators, technology companies, and society as a whole.
In the meantime, creators using AI tools will need to document and demonstrate meaningful human creative involvement if they hope to secure copyright protections. Until there is decisive legislative action or a future Supreme Court ruling, human authorship remains the defining criterion for copyright in the United States.


