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TylerH
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At least in the US, IMO, yes. The output of AI generation cannot be copyrighted, because it's not the work of a human.1 Thus, all such AI generation output is in the public domain, which means that licensing it really doesn't exist as a concept. However, it will be a derivative work of CC BY-SA content,2 so the license would still apply, due to the fact that it's a derivative work. Basically, the copyright holder of the original work retains rights in the derivative work, such that permission is needed from both the original copyright holder and the creator of the derivative work. The original copyright holder has granted a CC BY-SA license for the original work, so complying with that would be required.

As to the output of what will result from Stack Overflow's partnership with OpenAI described in "Our Partnership with OpenAI" being properly attributed, Rosie, the Stack Overflow employee who posted the above announcement on Meta Stack Exchange, has said:

Attribution is something that we believe strongly in. Having credit attributed is a non-negotiable for us, and is a critical part of any and all partnerships of this type. There aren’t specific details yet because the work is just starting, but making sure attribution is happening (in a license-compliant way) is a commitment we require and have received from our partners. This is the very heart of socially responsible AI.

Note that basically all existing posts on the Stack Exchange Network have already been used by companies to create LLM based AIs, and those posts have been used from the beginning, just not with the company's participation or explicit permission. The partnership which the company has announced gives the company a bit more control over what happens and allows the company to be more proactive about making sure that attribution happens. Without such a partnership, the company has no legal right to try to enforce that there is attribution, because only the copyright holder (i.e., individual contributors, or their agent, which Stack Overflow is not) has legal standing to enforce the license agreement.


  1. Per multiple rulings by the U.S. Copyright Office, as discussed in Copyright Registration Guidance: Works Containing Material Generated by Artificial Intelligence.
  2. IMOIn my opinion, the AI model is a derivative work of the training data and the output is a derivative work of the AI model. There are counter-arguments to this, with most AI-generation companies claiming that using basically anything as training data is "fair use" (a US copyright law concept). "Fair use" in the US is something that can only be decided in a court case. How things ultimately turn out is up to the courts and/or new legislation which directly address these issues.

Note: I am not a lawyer. This is not legal advice. The above is largely just my opinion and contains various assumptions on my part. The area of law where copyright intersects with AI generation is currently being litigated in multiple lawsuits, even when just looking at the US, and will need to happen in nearly every jurisdiction. I would not expect resolution in this area of the law for many years, possibly more than a decade.

At least in the US, IMO, yes. The output of AI generation cannot be copyrighted, because it's not the work of a human.1 Thus, all such AI generation output is in the public domain, which means that licensing it really doesn't exist as a concept. However, it will be a derivative work of CC BY-SA content,2 so the license would still apply, due to the fact that it's a derivative work. Basically, the copyright holder of the original work retains rights in the derivative work, such that permission is needed from both the original copyright holder and the creator of the derivative work. The original copyright holder has granted a CC BY-SA license for the original work, so complying with that would be required.

As to the output of what will result from Stack Overflow's partnership with OpenAI described in "Our Partnership with OpenAI" being properly attributed, Rosie, the Stack Overflow employee who posted the above announcement on Meta Stack Exchange, has said:

Attribution is something that we believe strongly in. Having credit attributed is a non-negotiable for us, and is a critical part of any and all partnerships of this type. There aren’t specific details yet because the work is just starting, but making sure attribution is happening (in a license-compliant way) is a commitment we require and have received from our partners. This is the very heart of socially responsible AI.

Note that basically all existing posts on the Stack Exchange Network have already been used by companies to create LLM based AIs, and those posts have been used from the beginning, just not with the company's participation or explicit permission. The partnership which the company has announced gives the company a bit more control over what happens and allows the company to be more proactive about making sure that attribution happens. Without such a partnership, the company has no legal right to try to enforce that there is attribution, because only the copyright holder (i.e., individual contributors, or their agent, which Stack Overflow is not) has legal standing to enforce the license agreement.


  1. Per multiple rulings by the U.S. Copyright Office, as discussed in Copyright Registration Guidance: Works Containing Material Generated by Artificial Intelligence.
  2. IMO, the AI model is a derivative work of the training data and the output is a derivative work of the AI model. There are counter-arguments to this, with most AI-generation companies claiming that using basically anything as training data is "fair use" (a US copyright law concept). "Fair use" in the US is something that can only be decided in a court case. How things ultimately turn out is up to the courts and/or new legislation which directly address these issues.

Note: I am not a lawyer. This is not legal advice. The above is largely just my opinion and contains various assumptions on my part. The area of law where copyright intersects with AI generation is currently being litigated in multiple lawsuits, even when just looking at the US, and will need to happen in nearly every jurisdiction. I would not expect resolution in this area of the law for many years, possibly more than a decade.

At least in the US, IMO, yes. The output of AI generation cannot be copyrighted, because it's not the work of a human.1 Thus, all such AI generation output is in the public domain, which means that licensing it really doesn't exist as a concept. However, it will be a derivative work of CC BY-SA content,2 so the license would still apply, due to the fact that it's a derivative work. Basically, the copyright holder of the original work retains rights in the derivative work, such that permission is needed from both the original copyright holder and the creator of the derivative work. The original copyright holder has granted a CC BY-SA license for the original work, so complying with that would be required.

As to the output of what will result from Stack Overflow's partnership with OpenAI described in "Our Partnership with OpenAI" being properly attributed, Rosie, the Stack Overflow employee who posted the above announcement on Meta Stack Exchange, has said:

Attribution is something that we believe strongly in. Having credit attributed is a non-negotiable for us, and is a critical part of any and all partnerships of this type. There aren’t specific details yet because the work is just starting, but making sure attribution is happening (in a license-compliant way) is a commitment we require and have received from our partners. This is the very heart of socially responsible AI.

Note that basically all existing posts on the Stack Exchange Network have already been used by companies to create LLM based AIs, and those posts have been used from the beginning, just not with the company's participation or explicit permission. The partnership which the company has announced gives the company a bit more control over what happens and allows the company to be more proactive about making sure that attribution happens. Without such a partnership, the company has no legal right to try to enforce that there is attribution, because only the copyright holder (i.e., individual contributors, or their agent, which Stack Overflow is not) has legal standing to enforce the license agreement.


  1. Per multiple rulings by the U.S. Copyright Office, as discussed in Copyright Registration Guidance: Works Containing Material Generated by Artificial Intelligence.
  2. In my opinion, the AI model is a derivative work of the training data and the output is a derivative work of the AI model. There are counter-arguments to this, with most AI-generation companies claiming that using basically anything as training data is "fair use" (a US copyright law concept). "Fair use" in the US is something that can only be decided in a court case. How things ultimately turn out is up to the courts and/or new legislation which directly address these issues.

Note: I am not a lawyer. This is not legal advice. The above is largely just my opinion and contains various assumptions on my part. The area of law where copyright intersects with AI generation is currently being litigated in multiple lawsuits, even when just looking at the US, and will need to happen in nearly every jurisdiction. I would not expect resolution in this area of the law for many years, possibly more than a decade.

Link to Copyright Registration Guidance: Works Containing Material Generated by Artificial Intelligence
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Makyen Mod
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At least in the US, IMO, yes. The output of AI generation cannot be copyrighted, because it's not the work of a human.1 Thus, all such AI generation output is in the public domain, which means that licensing it really doesn't exist as a concept. However, it will be a derivative work of CC BY-SA content,2 so the license would still apply, due to the fact that it's a derivative work. Basically, the copyright holder of the original work retains rights in the derivative work, such that permission is needed from both the original copyright holder and the creator of the derivative work. The original copyright holder has granted a CC BY-SA license for the original work, so complying with that would be required.

As to the output of what will result from Stack Overflow's partnership with OpenAI described in "Our Partnership with OpenAI" being properly attributed, Rosie, the Stack Overflow employee who posted the above announcement on Meta Stack Exchange, has said:

Attribution is something that we believe strongly in. Having credit attributed is a non-negotiable for us, and is a critical part of any and all partnerships of this type. There aren’t specific details yet because the work is just starting, but making sure attribution is happening (in a license-compliant way) is a commitment we require and have received from our partners. This is the very heart of socially responsible AI.

Note that basically all existing posts on the Stack Exchange Network have already been used by companies to create LLM based AIs, and those posts have been used from the beginning, just not with the company's participation or explicit permission. The partnership which the company has announced gives the company a bit more control over what happens and allows the company to be more proactive about making sure that attribution happens. Without such a partnership, the company has no legal right to try to enforce that there is attribution, because only the copyright holder (i.e., individual contributors, or their agent, which Stack Overflow is not) has legal standing to enforce the license agreement.


  1. Per multiple rulings by the U.S. Copyright Office, as discussed in Copyright Registration Guidance: Works Containing Material Generated by Artificial Intelligence.
  2. IMO, the AI model is a derivative work of the training data and the output is a derivative work of the AI model. There are counter-arguments to this, with most AI-generation companies claiming that using basically anything as training data is "fair use" (a US copyright law concept). "Fair use" in the US is something that can only be decided in a court case. How things ultimately turn out is up to the courts and/or new legislation which directly address these issues.

Note: I am not a lawyer. This is not legal advice. The above is largely just my opinion and contains various assumptions on my part. The area of law where copyright intersects with AI generation is currently being litigated in multiple lawsuits, even when just looking at the US, and will need to happen in nearly every jurisdiction. I would not expect resolution in this area of the law for many years, possibly more than a decade.

At least in the US, IMO, yes. The output of AI generation cannot be copyrighted, because it's not the work of a human.1 Thus, all such AI generation output is in the public domain, which means that licensing it really doesn't exist as a concept. However, it will be a derivative work of CC BY-SA content, so the license would still apply, due to the fact that it's a derivative work. Basically, the copyright holder of the original work retains rights in the derivative work, such that permission is needed from both the original copyright holder and the creator of the derivative work. The original copyright holder has granted a CC BY-SA license for the original work, so complying with that would be required.

As to the output of what will result from Stack Overflow's partnership with OpenAI described in "Our Partnership with OpenAI" being properly attributed, Rosie, the Stack Overflow employee who posted the above announcement on Meta Stack Exchange, has said:

Attribution is something that we believe strongly in. Having credit attributed is a non-negotiable for us, and is a critical part of any and all partnerships of this type. There aren’t specific details yet because the work is just starting, but making sure attribution is happening (in a license-compliant way) is a commitment we require and have received from our partners. This is the very heart of socially responsible AI.

Note that basically all existing posts on the Stack Exchange Network have already been used by companies to create LLM based AIs, and those posts have been used from the beginning, just not with the company's participation or explicit permission. The partnership which the company has announced gives the company a bit more control over what happens and allows the company to be more proactive about making sure that attribution happens. Without such a partnership, the company has no legal right to try to enforce that there is attribution, because only the copyright holder (i.e., individual contributors, or their agent, which Stack Overflow is not) has legal standing to enforce the license agreement.


  1. Per multiple rulings by the U.S. Copyright Office, as discussed in Copyright Registration Guidance: Works Containing Material Generated by Artificial Intelligence.

Note: I am not a lawyer. This is not legal advice. The above is largely just my opinion and contains various assumptions on my part. The area of law where copyright intersects with AI generation is currently being litigated in multiple lawsuits, even when just looking at the US, and will need to happen in nearly every jurisdiction. I would not expect resolution in this area of the law for many years, possibly more than a decade.

At least in the US, IMO, yes. The output of AI generation cannot be copyrighted, because it's not the work of a human.1 Thus, all such AI generation output is in the public domain, which means that licensing it really doesn't exist as a concept. However, it will be a derivative work of CC BY-SA content,2 so the license would still apply, due to the fact that it's a derivative work. Basically, the copyright holder of the original work retains rights in the derivative work, such that permission is needed from both the original copyright holder and the creator of the derivative work. The original copyright holder has granted a CC BY-SA license for the original work, so complying with that would be required.

As to the output of what will result from Stack Overflow's partnership with OpenAI described in "Our Partnership with OpenAI" being properly attributed, Rosie, the Stack Overflow employee who posted the above announcement on Meta Stack Exchange, has said:

Attribution is something that we believe strongly in. Having credit attributed is a non-negotiable for us, and is a critical part of any and all partnerships of this type. There aren’t specific details yet because the work is just starting, but making sure attribution is happening (in a license-compliant way) is a commitment we require and have received from our partners. This is the very heart of socially responsible AI.

Note that basically all existing posts on the Stack Exchange Network have already been used by companies to create LLM based AIs, and those posts have been used from the beginning, just not with the company's participation or explicit permission. The partnership which the company has announced gives the company a bit more control over what happens and allows the company to be more proactive about making sure that attribution happens. Without such a partnership, the company has no legal right to try to enforce that there is attribution, because only the copyright holder (i.e., individual contributors, or their agent, which Stack Overflow is not) has legal standing to enforce the license agreement.


  1. Per multiple rulings by the U.S. Copyright Office, as discussed in Copyright Registration Guidance: Works Containing Material Generated by Artificial Intelligence.
  2. IMO, the AI model is a derivative work of the training data and the output is a derivative work of the AI model. There are counter-arguments to this, with most AI-generation companies claiming that using basically anything as training data is "fair use" (a US copyright law concept). "Fair use" in the US is something that can only be decided in a court case. How things ultimately turn out is up to the courts and/or new legislation which directly address these issues.

Note: I am not a lawyer. This is not legal advice. The above is largely just my opinion and contains various assumptions on my part. The area of law where copyright intersects with AI generation is currently being litigated in multiple lawsuits, even when just looking at the US, and will need to happen in nearly every jurisdiction. I would not expect resolution in this area of the law for many years, possibly more than a decade.

Link to Copyright Registration Guidance: Works Containing Material Generated by Artificial Intelligence
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Makyen Mod
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At least in the US, IMO, yes. The output of AI generation cannot be copyrighted, because it's not the work of a human.1 Thus, all such AI generation output is in the public domain, which means that licensing it really doesn't exist as a concept. However, it will be a derivative work of CC BY-SA content, so the license would still apply, due to the fact that it's a derivative work. Basically, the copyright holder of the original work retains rights in the derivative work, such that permission is needed from both the original copyright holder and the creator of the derivative work. The original copyright holder has granted a CC BY-SA license for the original work, so complying with that would be required.

As to the output of what will result from Stack Overflow's partnership with OpenAI described in "Our Partnership with OpenAI" being properly attributed, Rosie, the Stack Overflow employee who posted the above announcement on Meta Stack Exchange, has said:

Attribution is something that we believe strongly in. Having credit attributed is a non-negotiable for us, and is a critical part of any and all partnerships of this type. There aren’t specific details yet because the work is just starting, but making sure attribution is happening (in a license-compliant way) is a commitment we require and have received from our partners. This is the very heart of socially responsible AI.

Note that basically all existing posts on the Stack Exchange Network have already been used by companies to create LLM based AIs, and those posts have been used from the beginning, just not with the company's participation or explicit permission. The partnership which the company has announced gives the company a bit more control over what happens and allows the company to be more proactive about making sure that attribution happens. Without such a partnership, the company has no legal right to try to enforce that there is attribution, because only the copyright holder (i.e., individual contributors, or their agent, which Stack Overflow is not) has legal standing to enforce the license agreement.


  1. Per multiple rulings by the U.S. Copyright Office, as discussed in Copyright Registration Guidance: Works Containing Material Generated by Artificial Intelligence.

Note: I am not a lawyer. This is not legal advice. The above is largely just my opinion and contains various assumptions on my part. The area of law where copyright intersects with AI generation is currently being litigated in multiple lawsuits, even when just looking at the US, and will need to happen in nearly every jurisdiction. I would not expect resolution in this area of the law for many years, possibly more than a decade.

At least in the US, IMO, yes. The output of AI generation cannot be copyrighted, because it's not the work of a human. Thus, all such AI generation output is in the public domain, which means that licensing it really doesn't exist as a concept. However, it will be a derivative work of CC BY-SA content, so the license would still apply, due to the fact that it's a derivative work. Basically, the copyright holder of the original work retains rights in the derivative work, such that permission is needed from both the original copyright holder and the creator of the derivative work. The original copyright holder has granted a CC BY-SA license for the original work, so complying with that would be required.

As to the output of what will result from Stack Overflow's partnership with OpenAI described in "Our Partnership with OpenAI" being properly attributed, Rosie, the Stack Overflow employee who posted the above announcement on Meta Stack Exchange, has said:

Attribution is something that we believe strongly in. Having credit attributed is a non-negotiable for us, and is a critical part of any and all partnerships of this type. There aren’t specific details yet because the work is just starting, but making sure attribution is happening (in a license-compliant way) is a commitment we require and have received from our partners. This is the very heart of socially responsible AI.

Note that basically all existing posts on the Stack Exchange Network have already been used by companies to create LLM based AIs, and those posts have been used from the beginning, just not with the company's participation or explicit permission. The partnership which the company has announced gives the company a bit more control over what happens and allows the company to be more proactive about making sure that attribution happens. Without such a partnership, the company has no legal right to try to enforce that there is attribution, because only the copyright holder (i.e., individual contributors, or their agent, which Stack Overflow is not) has legal standing to enforce the license agreement.


Note: I am not a lawyer. This is not legal advice. The above is largely just my opinion and contains various assumptions on my part. The area of law where copyright intersects with AI generation is currently being litigated in multiple lawsuits, even when just looking at the US, and will need to happen in nearly every jurisdiction. I would not expect resolution in this area of the law for many years, possibly more than a decade.

At least in the US, IMO, yes. The output of AI generation cannot be copyrighted, because it's not the work of a human.1 Thus, all such AI generation output is in the public domain, which means that licensing it really doesn't exist as a concept. However, it will be a derivative work of CC BY-SA content, so the license would still apply, due to the fact that it's a derivative work. Basically, the copyright holder of the original work retains rights in the derivative work, such that permission is needed from both the original copyright holder and the creator of the derivative work. The original copyright holder has granted a CC BY-SA license for the original work, so complying with that would be required.

As to the output of what will result from Stack Overflow's partnership with OpenAI described in "Our Partnership with OpenAI" being properly attributed, Rosie, the Stack Overflow employee who posted the above announcement on Meta Stack Exchange, has said:

Attribution is something that we believe strongly in. Having credit attributed is a non-negotiable for us, and is a critical part of any and all partnerships of this type. There aren’t specific details yet because the work is just starting, but making sure attribution is happening (in a license-compliant way) is a commitment we require and have received from our partners. This is the very heart of socially responsible AI.

Note that basically all existing posts on the Stack Exchange Network have already been used by companies to create LLM based AIs, and those posts have been used from the beginning, just not with the company's participation or explicit permission. The partnership which the company has announced gives the company a bit more control over what happens and allows the company to be more proactive about making sure that attribution happens. Without such a partnership, the company has no legal right to try to enforce that there is attribution, because only the copyright holder (i.e., individual contributors, or their agent, which Stack Overflow is not) has legal standing to enforce the license agreement.


  1. Per multiple rulings by the U.S. Copyright Office, as discussed in Copyright Registration Guidance: Works Containing Material Generated by Artificial Intelligence.

Note: I am not a lawyer. This is not legal advice. The above is largely just my opinion and contains various assumptions on my part. The area of law where copyright intersects with AI generation is currently being litigated in multiple lawsuits, even when just looking at the US, and will need to happen in nearly every jurisdiction. I would not expect resolution in this area of the law for many years, possibly more than a decade.

posts are already being used.
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Makyen Mod
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IANAL
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