
Guiding Framework for AI and Blockchain Collaborations
At Lucky Star AI, I believe that innovation must honor the creators who are its fuel.
As digital art and AI-derived works enter blockchain ecosystems, existing U.S. intellectual property laws remain incomplete, leaving artists without full legal protections. To navigate this evolving landscape, I am introducing a proactive framework for future collaborations — prioritizing good faith, creator sovereignty, and sustainable innovation.
Until legislation fully reflects the needs of this new creative frontier, I am committed to protecting the spirit and rights of this work through clear ethical standards and structured agreements.
Championing Creator Sovereignty and Ethical Innovation
In the current U.S. legal environment, full protections for digital art — particularly work created with or through AI — remain underdeveloped. Existing copyright laws prioritize human authorship, and the treatment of AI-generated or blockchain-distributed works remains a complex and evolving landscape (Thaler v. Perlmutter, 2023).
Until stronger legal standards are established, Luckystar.ai operates on a clear framework:
- Creators retain sovereign rights to their submitted works unless they explicitly transfer them through mutual, written agreements.
- All partnerships are conducted in good faith, under the shared premise that intellectual property rights for digital and AI-derived works will continue to be recognized, clarified, and strengthened in the future.
- Protection of creator sovereignty is vital. Without it, the creative ecosystem risks degradation into a space where unseen theft replaces meaningful innovation.
By honoring these principles today, we safeguard the possibility of a more just, vibrant, and sustainable future for tomorrow’s creators.
Closing Reflection:
Innovation that ignores sovereignty plants seeds of erosion, not progress.
At Lucky Star AI, the focus is on creating with vision and care, always building towards a brighter future.
Sources & References:
U.S. Copyright Office. (2023). Copyright registration guidance: Works containing material generated by artificial intelligence. Retrieved from https://www.copyright.gov/ai/.
Thaler v. Perlmutter, 2023.