Abstract
In May 2023, the Center for AI Safety, a nonprofit dedicated to reducing the risks of artificial intelligence misuse, held a conference to discuss a single sentence statement. This statement was signed by an international group of experts, including chief AI executives, nuclear physicists, politicians, and more. Artificial Intelligence serves as one of the modern world's greatest achievements and potentially greatest problems. Generative AI is not human, yet its creations pose problems in human copyright law and the First Amendment. This Note will address the development of AI, along with the reason why there is a need to regulate this technology and its application to individuals. Once the foundation of the problem is established, the concerns that arise from the regulation of this realm of technology will be analyzed: the regulation of AI input and output and the First Amendment implications of its regulation. Finally, this Note will present a solution informed from the current systems in order to integrate generative AI while preserving humanity.
Recommended Citation
Snodgrass, Natalie K.
(2026)
"Du Essenti Hominum: Regulating the Artificial Intelligence Crisis,"
Helms School of Government Undergraduate Law Review: Vol. 5:
Iss.
1, Article 4.
Available at:
https://digitalcommons.liberty.edu/helmsundergraduatelawreview/vol5/iss1/4