Introduction
One of the main themes
of question set out to analyze or answer in this piece is whether with the
inevitable intervention in the legal and cinematic space of the film industry
(my focus-case analysis) by Artificial intelligence, the Nigerian film industry
(Nollywood) has the overall infrastructural-socio-legal capacity to adapt to
this reality. I argue that with the New Nigerian copyright law in place
Nollywood can adapt but there needs to be a national and legal policy
initiative, which is within the forte of the Nigerian copyright commission
(NCC).
A new creative dawn
In
my recent article here, I stated the benefits and
advantages of the new Nigerian copyright law- its
recognition and protection of digital
copyright
practices of creatives. Digital copyright is essentially the interconnectedness
of technological interventions in the creative processes within the literary,
artistic, performing, scientific and cultural productive works. Artificial
intelligence (AI) is a technological intervention, which has disrupted the
creative spaces. In the film industry globally including Nigeria, the impact of AI interventions in
the creative productive modes are apparent. AI and computer programs-software
have improved not just the aesthetic feel of films but it has enabled
informational, entertainment, educational and entrepreneurial objectives of
creators. It has also become a legitimate legal tool for creators to protect, promote
and enforce their copyright and other intellectual property rights.
Counterfactually, AI has become a worrisome human intervention not only in the
creative spaces but in the national security structures of countries, personal
safety of people, health care sectors and social-moral Order of societies.
A parable of horrible or a realism?
The
emergence of AI, particularly the various generative AI tools, which produces
audio, images and literary content-ChatGPT, Bard and Dall-E have upturned the creativity
spaces. There is no doubt these technologies have beneficial purposes. For
example, in the healthcare
industry,
technological devices powered in AI have been used to diagnose complicated
illnesses in remote parts of the world
who have no human medical experts and without economic access to such needed
services.
However,
like every new technology, AI generates fear, risk and dangers to humanity. The unknowns, lack of consistent
regulatory framework and consensually accepted legal regimes have impelled the
public’s anxiety about the impact of AI on all facets of life. Who will be
responsible in the event of a mishap caused by an AI? That question
continues to blow in the wings. Although, the legal AI movement have made cases for the legal recognition of AI as
owners and authors of creative-innovative- artistic, literary, scientific and
technological outcomes (inventions, devices, or works), almost all intellectual
property laws particularly, patent and copyright recognize only human
person(s)
as owners or authors. AI as an inventive or a creative process (works) are
protected by IP as either a scientific, literary (because of the
software-computer programs interrelationship).
The
most apprehensive features of AI for the film industries of the developing
economies of the global South may be the reality and concerns of loss of jobs
particular within the lower cadre of creative productions. Artists and
downstream creatives like graphic artists, camera persons, make-up artists and
auxiliary performers within a production crew are at certain risk of losing
their gainful employment. Nollywood will feel this reality too and soon.
Nigerian copyright law may spur
Nollywood’s AI reach
AI
does some good in the film industry. Creatively,
AI is deplored in protecting authorial and ownership rights particularly in the
digital platform. For example, Google has been using AI like its Google Content
ID
and translation tools to enforce creators' distributive and reproductive rights
through taking down infringing contents and making cinematic contents
understandable outside the original language used in producing films. These AI
filters have gone a long way to ameliorate cases of copyright infringement of
audiovisual contents on the Internet spaces. Although there exist contrary views as to the benefits of these digital
creative filters to creators, perhaps it would have been a free-ride bonanza
without the help of AI.
The
Nigerian Copyright Commission (NCC) could get ahead of the AI generative and
assistive movement by using its administrative law powers under the new
copyright regime to make rules and set norms on how it may support creativity
around the AI generative and assistive input-output of works. Even in the Nollywood
industry AI has been deplored in its creative productions. The animations and
voice-over features in recent Nollywood films are all enabled by AI. What the
Nollywood industry needs now is the scaling of its use of AI and its
involvement in the entrepreneurial side of being investors in generative AI
especially for creating cinematic works. From my research and studies as a
Nollywood legal scholar, it has the ingenuity of creating and evolving within
the technological disruptions. Afterall, Nollywood is a child of disruptive
technology
of the early 1990s.
Nigerian
copyright law protects AI as a literary work from being used without the
creator’s permission (except where legal exceptions like fair dealing or fair
use applies), being mostly created through software coding, computer programs
and algorithmic creations. Perhaps, other intellectual property (IP) laws like
Patents may protect AI from infringements too. However, AI standing alone
cannot own any IP rights under Nigerian law and in most parts of the world. AI
impact on creativity and its jurisprudence is inevitable therefore, rail guards
for managing, regulating and promoting cultural creations like Nollywood should
be optimal for stakeholders in Nigeria.
Putting the rail guards
Intellectual
property laws have adopted tortious, contractual and criminal regimes holding
accountable parties that have engaged in offensive and illegal inventive and
creative ways. In the creative platforms and spaces, IP reached out to the law of tort to hold primary and
secondary
infringer’s of rights contributorily liable for their actions. Parties
have also been held criminally responsible for conduct contrary to
IP regimes and the same template applies where contract law is applied so that infringers of IP
rights do not escape responsibility. In the era of AI and IP creative nuptials
perhaps a sui generis category strict
liability
regime may be needed in cases of high-impact infringement of IP rights.
It
appears that legal liability on an AI may be difficult if not impossible to
achieve. AI being a machine or non-human entity may not fully appreciate the
consequences of any forms of legal, social or economic damages it would have
caused to a victim or respondent. Therefore, holding the creators or owners of
an AI may be the first place to lay responsibility. NCC could insert this
secondary or contributory liability standard into a regulation or promote it as
an amendment into the Nigerian copyright law. This is a new norm for the
purposes of regulating AI in the Nigerian creative industries.
*
S.
Samiái Andrews © 2023. Professor Samuel Samiái Andrews is
a Professor of Intellectual Property Law, and USA Ambassador’s Distinguished
Scholar writes from Saudi Arabia.