Unit 13 explores the creativity, authorship, and intellectual property aspects of human-AI mobile storytelling — the deep and ongoing questions about creative agency, author identity, originality, ownership, and copyright that AI-generated narratives raise.
Apply creativity theory and aesthetic frameworks to human-AI collaborative authorship
Evaluate application and limitations of existing copyright law to AI-generated narrative content
Analyze ethical dimensions of creative credit and narrative ownership in human-AI storytelling
Apply the 3D framework to analyze creativity and authorship claims
Develop an original position on the IP framework most appropriate for AI-generated mobile narratives
Boden, M. A. (2004). The creative mind: Myths and mechanisms (2nd ed.). Routledge. (Chapters 1–3)
Lessig, L. (2004). Free culture. Penguin Press. (Chapters 1–4)
Ginsburg, J. C., & Budiardjo, L. A. (2019). Authors and machines. Berkeley Technology Law Journal, 34(2), 343–456.
Gervais, D. (2020). The human cause. GRUR International, 69(5), 382–395.
Runco, M. A., & Jaeger, G. J. (2012). The standard definition of creativity. Creativity Research Journal, 24(1), 92–96.
Expand each activity and click "Mark as complete" to track your progress.
600–800 word reflection: CICI documentation from Activity 13.4, 3D analysis of key copyright doctrine gap, philosophical stance on AI creative agency, and 3M framework for monitoring IP compliance at scale.