As of August 29th, all projects posted on Kickstarter (the site where creators of all kinds can apply for funding) will ask you, the creator, to indicate if and how your project uses AI in any way. This is how Kickstarter describes its new policyof:
“In order to be allowed on Kickstarter, projects that use AI tools to generate images, text, or any other output must disclose relevant details on their project page. This includes information about how creators plan to use AI content in their projects, and other Which elements of the project will be completely original work and which elements will be created using AI output.
Creators must also describe how these sources handle consent and credit for the data they use. If a source doesn’t have processes or safeguards in place to manage consent, such as through an opt-out notice or an opt-in mechanism, then Kickstarter is unlikely to allow the project.
In a nutshell, this means that in addition to whether and how they use AI, creators must also indicate which parts of the project were created by human hands, which were generated by AI, and on which sources the AI worked. training.
However, Kickstarter ultimately wants to make it clear that they don’t intend to stop AI enthusiasts, but rather the opposite:
“We’re not banning artificial intelligence. Our policy requires ad hoc: Involving human creative input[和]credit, with permission for any artist work it cites[…]We want Kickstarter to be a place where creators can embrace emerging technologies. But it’s critical to continue to respect and support the people behind creative work.