Supreme Court Rejects AI Art Copyright Case, Upholds Human Authorship Requirement
March 2, 2026
The U.S. Supreme Court declined to hear Thaler’s bid on whether AI-generated art can be copyrighted, preserving the rule that human authorship is required for eligibility.
Lower courts had already upheld the Copyright Office’s stance, including a Washington federal judge and the D.C. Circuit, keeping the 2025 decision intact.
Thaler’s case is part of a broader fight over AI-generated content, with similar disputes surrounding AI-created images and prior attempts to patent AI-generated inventions.
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The ruling has wide implications for creators, AI developers, and owners of AI-generated content as they navigate current IP rights.
Experts say the decision doesn’t settle the broader AI-authorship debate, and similar cases are likely to reemerge with higher-stakes parties.
The decision underscores ongoing tension between AI innovation and traditional copyright law, with implications for authorship, registration, and potential chilling effects on speech and investment.
The artwork involved depicts train tracks entering a portal, framed by green and purple foliage, and Thaler’s registration effort began in 2018.
The ruling effectively ends the case, suggesting AI-assisted works may be eligible for copyright under current practice, per Bloomberg Law coverage.
There is expectation that copyright law may evolve as AI depictions become more prevalent, but ownership currently remains with human creators where applicable.
The outcome maintains that AI tools are instruments used by human creators, not authors themselves.
The decision leaves in place existing standards on authorship and protection for AI-assisted or AI-generated works.
Summary based on 26 sources
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Sources

The Verge • Mar 2, 2026
Supreme Court won’t hear AI-generated art copyright case
Reuters • Mar 2, 2026
US Supreme Court declines to hear dispute over copyrights for AI-generated material
Economic Times • Mar 2, 2026
US Supreme Court declines to hear dispute over copyrights for AI-generated material