最高裁のAI著作権判決は包括的に聞こえるが、実際にはほとんど解決していない
米最高裁がAI生成画像の著作権保護を否定的に扱ったケースを却下したが、これは「機械単独」の極端な例に限られ、人間がAIをツールとして使用した場合の著作権帰属という本質的な問題は依然として未解決である。
キーポイント
最高裁の却下と法的現状
米最高裁は、AIシステム「DABUS」が生成した画像の著作権登録を巡るStephen Thaler氏の訴えを却下し、下部法院の「人間関与のない純粋な機械生成物には著作権保護資格がない」という判断を確定させた。
ケースの限界と意図
Thaler氏はAI自体を著作者として認めることを目指しており、これは人間のクリエイターがAIツールを使用した場合の権利関係を問うものではないため、今回の判決は広範な業界への影響を限定している。
未解決の重大な質問
「どの程度の人間の関与(プロンプト作成、後処理など)があれば著作権が発生するか」という実務上最も重要な問いは判決から意図的に除外されており、今後の個別裁判で解決される必要がある。
米国著作権局のガイドライン
著作権局はプロンプト単独では保護対象にならないとしつつ、人間が創造的な選択や編集を行い、AI生成物と人間の要素を組み合わせる場合には保護される可能性があるという実用的な中間路線を示している。
影響分析・編集コメントを表示
影響分析
この判決は、AI生成コンテンツの法的地位を巡る議論において「人間関与」の境界線を明確にする重要な分水嶺となった。業界にとっては、AIを単なる生成ツールとして扱う限り著作権リスクは低いものの、その定義が曖昧であるため、クリエイターは作品の保護戦略を慎重に設計する必要がある。長期的には、AIと人間の共同作業の度合いに応じた細かな法解釈が蓄積されることで、実務的なガイドラインが確立されていくと考えられる。
編集コメント
最高裁が「機械の著作者性」という哲学的な議論を回避した一方で、実務的な「人間の関与の程度」という核心課題は依然として裁判所の裁量に委ねられている。企業は単なるプロンプト出力ではなく、独自の創造的プロセスを記録・証明する体制が求められます。

AI発明家のスティーブン・テイラーは、米国最高裁に対し、機械を画像の唯一の著作者として認めるよう求めた。裁判所はこの要求を退けたが、この判決が対象とするのはこの極端な事例のみである。AIツールを利用して作成した作品について人が著作権を主張できるか否かについては、何も言及していない。
本記事「Supreme Court AI copyright decision sounds sweeping but actually settles very little」は、The Decoderに最初に掲載されました。
原文を表示
The US Supreme Court has refused to take up a case about copyright protection for AI-generated art. But the ruling only covers one extreme scenario and leaves the really important question wide open.
On Monday, the US Supreme Court decided not to hear computer scientist Stephen Thaler's appeal. Thaler had sought copyright for an image that his AI system "DABUS" allegedly produced entirely on its own, without any human involvement. With the court's refusal, the lower courts' decision stands: purely machine-generated art with no human creator doesn't qualify for copyright protection in the US.
The case goes back to 2018, when Thaler applied to the US Copyright Office to register the image "A Recent Entrance to Paradise," listing his AI system as the author and himself as just the owner. The office rejected the application in 2022. A federal court in Washington upheld that rejection in 2023, and the Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit followed suit in 2025. Now the highest court has turned the case away too, meaning it won't get another hearing.
Thaler's fight was about the machine as author
Thaler's lawyers argued before the Supreme Court that the case was of "paramount importance" given the rapid rise of generative AI. Without a hearing, the Copyright Office will have "irreversibly and negatively impacted AI development and use in the creative industry during critically important years," they claimed.
But Thaler's strategy was ideological from the start: he didn't want to secure copyright as a human using an AI tool. He wanted the machine itself recognized as the creator.
Thaler is a member of the "Artificial Inventor Project", a lobby group pushing to get patents granted to AI systems. In a separate patent dispute where he tried to protect AI-generated inventions, the Supreme Court had already refused to hear his case.
This is exactly why the ruling says less than many people think. Judge Beryl A. Howell, who decided the case at the trial level in 2023, explicitly noted that current copyright law is hitting "new frontiers" as artists bring AI into their work. The key question—how much human input is needed when creating an AI work for it to qualify for copyright—was deliberately left unanswered.
So the ruling says nothing about whether someone who uses generative AI as a creative tool can claim copyright on what comes out. Is a well-crafted prompt enough? Or does it take additional work like post-processing or training a specialized model? Those questions will have to be sorted out in future cases.
The US Copyright Office has since put out guidelines that take a pragmatic middle ground: prompts alone don't cut it for copyright protection because they don't give the user enough control over how the AI processes instructions. The office compares prompting to a "throw of the dice." But if a human adds substantial creative elements, feeds in their own works, or makes a creative selection and arrangement of human and AI-generated material, protection can apply. A film, for example, stays protected as a complete work even if it includes AI-generated special effects.
European courts are wrestling with the same questions
Recently, a court in Munich also denied copyright protection for an AI-generated image. But not because generative AI is fundamentally at odds with copyright law. The court ruled that the images in question were too generic and hadn't been reworked.
But the judge explicitly left the door open for copyright to apply when generative AI is part of a creative process with substantial human input. Where exactly the line falls between protected and unprotected AI-assisted work still hasn't been settled on either side of the Atlantic.
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