Believe Media director Wendy Morgan breaks out a new obsession in the form of Laura Mvula’s defiant “That’s Alright” video, for the third single on her album Sing To The Moon on the Sony Music UK Limited label.
The fierce Ms. Mvula, who has been compared to an artistic descendent of the great Nina Simone, jumps into a modern tango with several incredible male dancers, sinuously moving to the sound of an intoxicating beat until diving into a dark world.
Hearkening back to the 1940s-esque pied-piper dance march through her previous video with Wendy Morgan, “Green Gardens,” Mvula’s rhythms and spirit are an anthem for everyone marching to their own drum and dancing to their own beat.
AI-Assisted Works Can Get Copyright With Enough Human Creativity, According To U.S. Copyright Office
Artists can copyright works they made with the help of artificial intelligence, according to a new report by the U.S. Copyright Office that could further clear the way for the use of AI tools in Hollywood, the music industry and other creative fields.
The nation's copyright office, which sits in the Library of Congress and is not part of the executive branch, receives about half a million copyright applications per year covering millions of individual works. It has increasingly been asked to register works that are AI-generated.
And while many of those decisions are made on a case-by-case basis, the report issued Wednesday clarifies the office's approach as one based on what the top U.S. copyright official describes as the "centrality of human creativity" in authoring a work that warrants copyright protections.
"Where that creativity is expressed through the use of AI systems, it continues to enjoy protection," said a statement from Register of Copyrights Shira Perlmutter, who directs the office.
An AI-assisted work could be copyrightable if an artist's handiwork is perceptible. A human adapting an AI-generated output with "creative arrangements or modifications" could also make it fall under copyright protections.
The report follows a review that began in 2023 and fielded opinions from thousands of people that ranged from AI developers, to actors and country singers.
It shows the copyright office will continue to reject copyright claims for fully machine-generated content. A person simply prompting a chatbot or AI image generator to produce a work doesn't give that person the ability to copyright that work, according to the report. "Extending protection to material whose expressive elements are determined by a machine ...... Read More