Copyright Law: Can content created with the help of Artificial Intelligence be protected?

Generative artificial intelligence (AI) is all the rage these days, and for good reason. It is the next disruptive tool on the scale of the World Wide Web itself, so the sooner online educators learn and embrace it, the more likely they will be to keep pace with the advancing technology.

AI is certainly innovative. However, with innovation comes caution. While using AI may be fine for back-office purposes, such as creating marketing plans or figuring out the course titles that are most likely to grab attention, using AI to create substantive works may not be optimal and could even cause trouble for you down the road.

First, AI-generated content is not copyrightable. Only content created by humans can be protected. If your training course contains substantial artificial content, that content must be excluded when you register the copyright. Once the content has been excluded, the human-created remainder must be substantial enough to allow the registration to proceed.

Second, you cannot stop people from copying the AI-generated content you include in your course. Such content is considered to be within the public domain. You did not create it, so you don't own it. Thinking of the prompt that caused the AI to generate your desired content does not give you any claim to the content. Even if clever, the prompt itself is also unlikely to be considered original enough to be copyrightable.

Finally, how do you know the AI-generated content is accurate? AI gets its input from multiple sources, some of which may be solid and others dubious. If you republish incorrect information generated by AI, you could be liable for misleading the public, depending on the type of wrong information involved.

To learn more about copyright law, training, and training support materials, check out our upcoming training event led by Linda Wolff Rohrbaugh and Kevin Siegel.

Articulate Storyline 360: Integrated Comments

I updated my Articulate Storyline 360 a few days ago to version 3.79.3092.0 and was pleasantly surprised to see an improvement to the review workflow…review comments that appear directly within the Storyline project.

SlVersion

Publish your project to review 360.

Publishto360

PublishtoReview360

PublishSuccessful

Return to the Storyline project and notice that there's now a Comments window.

StorylineComments

Click the Review Request button.

ReviewRequest

Add your reviewers and click the Send request button.

AddReviewers

Your reviewers will receive a review invitation email, as shown below.

EmailInvitetoReview

Reviewers click the Go to Review 360 button and add comments as shown below. When done, reviewers click the I'm done reviewing button.

CommentAdded

DoneReviewing

The review comments appear in the Comments window within Storyline.

CommentsinStoryline

If you're looking for Storyline training, support, or mentoring, we've got you covered with our vILT classes, books, and development services.

Copyright Law: Using Images for Training

You've created training with Microsoft PowerPoint or an eLearning development tool such as Articulate Storyline, iSpring Suite, Articulate Rise, TechSmith Camtasia, or Adobe Captivate. Your training includes one or more copyrighted images.
 
If you are the copyright owner, you can reproduce or make copies of your images, distribute them to the public, and create derivative works based on the initial image. (Derivative works, also known as “adaptation rights,” include some or all of the original image and add new material to create something different from the original piece. For example, when you revise or update a website, you create a derivative work based on the old website. Other typical derivative works include translations, musical arrangements, dramatizations, fictionalizations, motion picture versions, sound recordings, art reproductions, abridgments, condensations, or any other form in which an image or video may be recast, transformed, or adapted.)
 
Copyright owners also have the right to publicly display the image at a place open to the public or to a substantial number of persons outside the usual circle of a family and its social acquaintances. Examples include using a photo in an eLearning project that will be marketed to the public, posting a picture on a website, or posting an NFT (a “non-fungible token,” which is a one-of-a-kind digital artwork, image, sound, motion picture, or anything else that can be downloaded and turned into an artificial intelligence algorithm) of a photo on an online marketplace.
 
But what are your rights to use the copyrighted image for training if you are not the copyright owner? Well, usually, you have no rights and should get permission. The fair use right to free speech is available to those who must use an image for criticism, commentary, parody, research, scholarship, or educational (face-to-face nonprofit) purposes. But even then, fair use is a defense that needs to be raised and proven to prevail.
 
The court will first consider the purpose of the use—whether commercial, promotional, or more about community benefit or criticism. Why would claiming fair use not work so well for you? A typical training course is a work made for commercial purposes, whether you sell the course or give it away to promote a platform or provider.
 
If there is a commercial purpose for the training, fair use is rarely found. Having a commercial purpose overrides the rest of the analysis in most cases. So, if your training is intended for an asynchronous audience or profit, getting permission is the wisest decision you can make because a fair use claim will likely go against you.
 
From a financial standpoint, if you decide to fight and claim fair use, the attorneys’ fees you have to pay to defend you are likely to come close to or even exceed the damage claim raised by the copyright owner, making it a poor business decision to pursue your “right.” Even if you have advertising injury insurance, your insurer may press you to settle rather than pursue your “rights” in court because it will typically hold their costs down.  
 
If the copyright owner discovers your use and sends you a cease and desist letter along with a demand for payment of damages, take it seriously. You can certainly try to negotiate with the owner to reduce the amount to pay in settlement of the claim, but if you ignore it, you may find yourself on the receiving end of a lawsuit that will likely go against you. The best, least expensive way to avoid unwanted litigation and a sizeable monetary penalty is getting permission in advance.

To learn more about copyright law as it relates to training and training support materials, check out our upcoming training event led by Linda Wolff Rohrbaugh and Kevin Siegel.

Adobe Captivate 12 (2023): The Timeline Widget

In the spirit of learner engagement and interactivity, you're going to love the widgets you'll find in Adobe Captivate 2023 (also known as Captivate 12). Over the next couple of weeks, I'll show you how to use the widgets in a project.

First up: the Timeline widget.

Open or create a Captivate project and insert a blank slide.

From the icons at the left, click Add new widget.

Add New Widget

Choose Timeline widget.

Timeline-Widget

The widget is added to the slide with placeholder content.

On the Visual Properties panel, change the number of timeline objects by moving the Number of nodes slider to as few as 2 and to as many as 6.

Timeline-nodes

Select a design:

Timeline-design

Add or remove your block components:

Timeline-block-components

And replace the placeholder objects with your own content.

Timeline-done

Preview the project to see the results and interact with the widget.

Timeline-done-previewed

If you want to see the Timeline widget in action, check out this video.

If you're looking for a step-by-step training workbook, Adobe Captivate 2023 training, or mentoring, we've got you covered.