Season 4, Episode 6. A Conversation with AI about Artificial Intelligence and Intellectual Property

Who truly owns the creations of artificial intelligence? Explore this compelling question as Leticia Caminero (AI version) and Artemisa, her delightful AI co-host, navigate the intriguing intersection of AI and intellectual property law. Uncover the legal complexities when AI is the creator, questioning if these digital minds should be granted the same rights as human inventors. From dissecting the Dabus patent saga to the enigmatic Zarya of the Dawn comic book case, you’ll gain a comprehensive understanding of how these legal battles are challenging traditional notions of ownership and creativity.

Join us for a thought-provoking journey that questions if the absence of IP rights might stifle AI advancements and innovation. We ponder the implications of AI-generated works in an ever-evolving legal landscape and draw historical parallels, such as the disruption caused by the printing press. Whether you’re a tech aficionado, legal enthusiast, or simply curious about the future, this episode promises to expand your perspective on AI’s profound impact on innovation and intellectual property. 

Tune in and rethink the future of creativity and ownership in an AI-driven world.

Love, Law, And The Valentine Economy Intangiblia™

Valentine’s Day feels effortless on the surface—red hearts, last‑minute roses, a playlist called “forever.” Pull back the foil, and you’ll find contracts, case law, and platform rules deciding which colors, words, motifs, and links reach your eyes first. We walk through 14 “love battles” where romance collides with intellectual property: Cadbury’s Pantone 2685C fight over color marks, Interflora’s keyword dispute that previews today’s AI overviews, and the rise of platform power that summarizes answers before you ever click.We unpack how greeting cards separate protectable expression from generic tropes, and why enforcement now pairs rights holders with marketplaces using AI to spot copycats at scale. On the luxury front, Cartier defends the LOVE bracelet across word marks and 3D trade dress, tackling influencer “hidden link” schemes and winning when “love” functions as a brand, not a feeling. Yet design law still draws limits: nature’s shared alphabet belongs to everyone, as seen in jewelry motif disputes where distinct execution—not broad ideas—earns protection.Music and media add fresh edges. Stairway to Heaven narrows claims built on genre grammar, while The Wind Done Gone affirms that transformative critique can legally reframe a classic romance. In apps, the Match Group vs Bumble saga raises whether swipes, card stacks, and mutual opt-in logic are ownable inventions or common digital language. And in a striking turn, New Zealand’s Supreme Court confirms that copyrights created during marriage carry divisible value, even as the artist keeps the rights—proof that creative assets follow economics into family law.Across these stories, one theme holds: clarity beats sentiment. Draft precisely, prove distinctiveness, and enforce where decisions happen—search pages, social feeds, marketplaces, and now AI summaries. If you care about brand integrity, creator rights, and what shows up when urgency drives the buy, you’ll find practical insights and timely warnings here. If this resonated, subscribe, share with a friend who thinks February is only about romance, and leave a review to help more listeners find us.Send a textCheck out "Protection for the Inventive Mind" – available now on Amazon in print and Kindle formats. The views and opinions expressed (by the host and guest(s)) in this podcast are strictly their own and do not necessarily reflect the official policy or position of the entities with which they may be affiliated. This podcast should in no way be construed as promoting or criticizing any particular government policy, institutional position, private interest or commercial entity. Any content provided is for informational and educational purposes only.
  1. Love, Law, And The Valentine Economy
  2. Case Study: How Intellectual Property Runs the Super Bowl
  3. Case Study: Lego’s Playbook For Intellectual Property
  4. Zodiac Season, Litigation Rising
  5. From Spark to Impact, the Conscious Path of an Idea

Comment | Comentario

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.