Deviation Actions
Description
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(Please see 's work! Her photography is one of the most sophisticated I've seen. <3)
Whenever I create a new character for a D&D campaign, I feel compelled to render the very character I've created. The open-ended creative aspect is what gets me going I suppose. :3
This is Escariet, a half-elf druid who once defended the inhabitants of her lush forest. Until she was forcibly removed. She fights to return to her distant land and to protect herself from ideals of the world that might corrupt the very meaning she stands for as a druidess.
Some data Donald J. Trump/ Biden don't want you to see! Maybe I dunno...
As soon as you create a work (whether with AI or not), you automatically have copyright over it, thanks to the US Copyright Act of 1976.
If you’re using AI art within a book (e.g., comic strips or illustrations) and want to officially register the book’s copyright with the USCO, you’ll need to declare your use of AI.
AI art on its own is uncopyrightable, but if you’ve significantly altered it, you can gain copyright, just as you would with a public domain image that you’ve modified
Sites with AI trained off their own data ending the whole 'art theft' cry.
Nine generative AI companies have already received Fairly Trained certifications:
Boomy
BRIA AI
Endel
LifeScore
Rightsify
Soundful
Tuney