Creative progress or mass theft? Why a major AI art auction is provoking wonder—and outrage
- Thirty-Four artworks created with artificial intelligence are being auctioned at Christie's in New York, marking its first collection dedicated to AI art.
- More than 6,000 artists signed an open letter asking Christie's to cancel the auction, claiming many works use AI models trained on copyrighted work without permission.
- The key question remains unresolved: by training AI models on existing artworks, do they infringe on artists' copyright or is it fair use?
- The open letter states that AI models and their companies 'exploit human artists,' using their work without permission to create commercial products that compete with them.
Insights by Ground AI
Does this summary seem wrong?
5 Articles
5 Articles
All
Left
1
Center
3
Right
Coverage Details
Total News Sources5
Leaning Left1Leaning Right0Center3Last UpdatedBias Distribution75% Center
Bias Distribution
- 75% of the sources are Center
75% Center
L 25%
C 75%
Factuality
To view factuality data please Upgrade to Premium
Ownership
To view ownership data please Upgrade to Vantage