In 2023, the U.S. Copyright Office made it official: art generated entirely by AI can’t be copyrighted. For artists and creators embracing tools like Midjourney, DALL·E, or Stable Diffusion, this ruling raised a serious concern: If I can’t copyright my work, how do I protect it?
The answer may not lie in traditional legal frameworks—but in blockchain technology.
As generative AI blurs the lines between human creativity and machine assistance, blockchain offers an alternative path to prove ownership, track provenance, and assign value to digital art. While governments catch up, creators don’t have to wait.
Under current U.S. copyright law, only works created by a human can be legally protected. If a piece of content is entirely AI-generated—meaning the human didn’t contribute significant original expression—it falls into the public domain.
This creates several challenges:
So where does that leave creators?
Blockchain doesn’t rely on legal recognition—it relies on decentralized verification. When an AI-generated piece of art is minted on a blockchain (as an NFT or similar token), it gains:
This means that even if your AI art can’t be copyrighted, you can still prove it was yours first—and control how it’s shared, sold, or licensed.
Here's how creators are already using blockchain to safeguard their AI creations:
Blockchain doesn’t just protect AI art—it amplifies its value:
While copyright law struggles to define what “authorship” means in the age of AI, blockchain provides a working solution today.
If you're a creator using AI tools, you may not have the luxury of copyright—but you do have the tools to establish proof, claim ownership, and monetize ethically.
Blockchain transforms the conversation from “Can I protect this?” to “How will I share and earn from it?”
In a world where AI generates the image—but you create the vision—blockchain ensures your role is recognized, protected, and rewarded.
No copyright? No problem.
Let the blockchain be your digital signature—and your creative shield.