<Anchor>



There are more and more things that AI cannot do.

I was still composing and composing in the field of art that I thought was still human.

So, can AI-created creations be recognized for their copyright?



Reporter Jeong Seong-jin found out.



<Reporter>



Each letter is engraved on the screen to complete a poem.



The author of this poem is not a poet, but an artificial intelligence.



An artificial intelligence who developed his skills by reading more than 13,000 poetry collections wrote 53 poems and published them.



The role of the human was to present the 'tense' and select the poems written by artificial intelligence.



[Looking at this world.]



A play is also being prepared for human interpretation and delivery of poems written by artificial intelligence.



[Kim Je-min/CEO of Slitscope: I am working with artificial intelligence as an object of co-creation, rather than simply as an artist's tool.]



There is also an artificial intelligence that has composed 30,000 songs over 4 years.



If you set the mood of the music, you can create songs of various genres from hip-hop to Korean traditional music in 10 minutes.



[Kim Tae-hyun / Chief Operating Officer of Forza Labs: Even when I did a blind test (with composers and critics), I was evaluated as being at the same level as a song composed by a human.]



As the role of artificial intelligence grows to the realm of art creation, which was only considered the realm of human beings, the discussion on how to protect the works created by artificial intelligence is intensifying.



Although AI composers have been listed in the Copyright Association in France, AI itself is rarely recognized as an author.



However, as the number of works created by artificial intelligence is increasing, it is necessary to set standards for who has how much rights and how to hold them accountable.



[Son Seung-woo / Director of Korea Intellectual Property Research Institute: Since artificial intelligence technology itself is not at the level of comprehensive judgment like humans, can it have legal subjectivity and whether it will protect it at the same level as human copyright (the core of the discussion)]



The government has been pushing for legislation related to artificial intelligence works for several years, but has yet to come up with a specific bill.



(Video coverage: Kim Won-bae, Video editing: Choi Hye-young)