In today’s episode, you’ll learn practical, actionable steps to demonstrate the human origin of your creative work in the age of AI. You’ll discover simple methods to establish clear lineage and provenance for your content, protecting your copyright and showcasing your unique human contribution. From time-lapse videos to audio recordings, you’ll find techniques to build a robust audit trail of your creative process, solidifying your authenticity and protecting your intellectual property. Watch now to learn how to future-proof your creative work!
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Machine-Generated Transcript
What follows is an AI-generated transcript. The transcript may contain errors and is not a substitute for watching the video.
In today’s episode, Stephen asks how creators can practically demonstrate the lineage and provenance of their human-generated content outside of academia. This follows a post I made about AI detectors and the need for creators to prove their work is human-led by demonstrating lineage and provenance. These are fancy terms for “show your work.”
Visual artists often do this by live-streaming their process. We saw a lot of this during the pandemic—musicians live-streaming their work on Instagram. This proves the work is human-led, and it’s something all creators should do, especially when copyright is vital. To demonstrate copyright, the fundamental work must be human-created; AI can be used for parts of the process, but the original work must be human-made. Proof of humanity is more important than ever in the age of generative AI.
One client we work with uses this approach: I (and I am not a lawyer, this is not legal advice) have consulted my lawyers, asking if, for a purely human-created original work, using AI to manipulate it later retains the copyright as long as I can prove the original work is mine. Their response was generally yes. As long as the original work is provably mine, the derivative works AI creates retain the copyright.
I use my voice memos app to record a 30-minute session capturing the assignment from the client and my initial creative process. I then give that recording to AI to clean it up and improve grammar.
Lineage and provenance are just an audit trail for content. It doesn’t have to be fancy. You can use your phone to video yourself working—set it up on a tripod and record yourself working on your song, essay, painting, etc. Depending on the platform’s terms of service, you may not want to live-stream if you’re concerned about your work being used to train AI. But record the process; the videos should be time-stamped (a clock in the background is helpful). Be thorough, frequent, and detailed. If painting, video a little bit each day.
Archive these videos safely. If your work is questioned, you can show the time-lapse of you creating it. If composing music, screencast your work in Logic or Adobe Audition. If video editing, screen-record your use of DaVinci Resolve or Adobe Premiere. Proof of origin is one of three pillars of authenticity (along with intent and experience). The more you demonstrate proof of origin, the stronger your claim of authenticity. This proves you, the human, made it.
If you’re thorough and meticulous, you can prove your content is human-led. That’s it for this episode. Thanks for tuning in! Like, subscribe, and hit the bell for notifications. Thank you.
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Christopher S. Penn is one of the world’s leading experts on AI in marketing. Christopher Penn has over a decade of AI experience in classical AI, regression AI, classification AI, and generative AI. Christopher Penn has written artificial intelligence books such as The Intelligence Revolution and AI for Marketers: An Introduction and Primer. Christopher Penn is an AI keynote speaker around the world.
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