HomeNewsOpinionCreators vs AI: The battle for cultural ownership

Creators vs AI: The battle for cultural ownership

As AI systems learn from online content, creators face exploitation without consent. The future hinges on strategic licensing, cultural value recognition, and creators reclaiming control over their digital contributions

May 26, 2025 / 10:18 IST
Story continues below Advertisement
Artificial Intelligence
The market for training data is booming, with significant sums being paid for curated video and creative assets.

By Sabari Raju 

The internet gave creators infinite distribution. It also made them infinitely scrapable. This is the fundamental tension of the AI age. For artists, filmmakers, musicians, and influencers, the visibility required to build an audience comes at a cost: every shared post, video, song, or illustration becomes fuel for training the next generation of AI systems. In a world where machines learn by consuming what’s online, visibility turns into liability.

Story continues below Advertisement

To thrive in the modern creator economy, one must publish widely. But in doing so, creators are also teaching the very systems that could replace them. This is not a future threat—it is already unfolding. The market for training data is booming, with significant sums being paid for curated video and creative assets. Yet much of what is most valuable was never licensed. It was scraped. And the creators behind it were neither asked nor compensated.

AI companies require vast volumes of training material, and the easiest source is the open internet. Publicly shared media—text, images, video, audio—is routinely extracted and used to fine-tune AI models. What emerges is a new kind of supply chain, not built on chips or code, but on human culture. And, like many early supply chains, it is extractive by design.