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Creativity with adequate resources, opportunities, and incentives to pursue their artistic and professional goals. We could also celebrate and encourage human creativity, diver- sity, and expression as sources of cultural richness and innovation. We can’t say on the one hand that AI will massively change the world and then that the antidote is “celebrating creativity.” Fes- tivals and ribbons aren’t going to help put (real) food on (real) tables. As we think about how AI will affect creators, we’re going to need some very creative thinking on an economic and policy level too. Let’s get back to a question we put a pin in earlier: who owns this stuff? Reid: If someone uses this GPT to help generate story ideas, and then she uses one of those ideas to create a screenplay and sells that screenplay, does OpenAI have any claim on the money from the sale? (250 words or less) (make prose more lively and less wooden than usual) GPT-4: The short answer is: no. OpenAI is a research organization that develops and shares artificial intelli- gence tools for the benefit of humanity. It does not claim any ownership or rights over the content that its tools produce or help produce. You are free to use the GPT tool as a source of inspiration, but you are responsible for your own originality, quality, and legality of your work. The long answer is: it depends. OpenAI has a Terms of Use and an Acceptable Use Policy that govern how you can use its tools and services. You have to agree to these terms when you access the GPT tool, and they include some restrictions and obligations. For example, you cannot use the tool for illegal, harmful, or abusive pur- 61

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