Generative Artificial Intelligence as Hypercommons: Ethics of Authorship and Ownership
Gazi Islam, Michelle Greenwood
Abstract
Abstract In this editorial essay, we argue that Generative Artificial Intelligence programs (GenAI) draw on what we term a “hypercommons”, involving collectively produced inputs and labour that are largely invisible or untraceable. We argue that automatizing the exploitation of common inputs, in ways that remix and reconfigure them, can lead to a crisis of academic authorship in which the moral agency involved in scholarly production is increasingly eroded. We discuss the relationship between the hypercommons and authorship in terms of moral agency and the ethics of academic production, speculating on different responses to the crisis of authorship as posed by GenAI.
Topics & Concepts
Business ethicsQuality of Life ResearchGenerative grammarSociologyArtificial intelligencePolitical scienceLawComputer scienceNursingMedicinePublic healthLaw, AI, and Intellectual PropertyEthics and Social Impacts of AIArtificial Intelligence in Healthcare and Education