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If SCOTUS is saying that AI works, even those co-authored by humans, are not eligible for copyright/patenting;

Doesn't that mean any code-base that uses AI generated code does not have an implicit copyright holder? And thus even the human constructor does not have the right to apply any license [closed/open] onto it whatsoever?

There is a huge difference between SCOTUS "declines to hear" versus SCOTUS "rules that ..."

Certainly there is no difference to these particular parties. But refusing to hear the case in such an important field as AI is simply an indication SCOTUS is feels it is too early for it to be making rules involving a very fast moving and transformative field as AI.

This area is so relatively new that SCOTUS is going to let it percolate through the lower courts (using the various circuits as laboratories to try out several approaches) and then address the issue once it is mature and a good circuit split has developed.

Nothing out of the ordinary, and nothing to lose sleep over at this point. "Move along."

Copyright trolls were probably licking their chops at the thought of copyrighting the output of common AI prompts.