TITLE:
AI IP EI Trilogy: A Human Challenge, and an Innovation Opportunity within Frugal Dimensions; Illustrated with Sport, a Driving Creative Force and Moderating Sounding Board
AUTHORS:
Serge Rebouillat, Antoine Rebouillat
KEYWORDS:
Frontier Technologies, AI, Intellectual Property, IP, Emotional Intelligence, EI, Ethics, Open Innovation, Frugal, Bias, Innovation, Collaborative, CollaboratoryTM, Adjacent Technology Analysis, ATA©, Biotechnology, Advanced Materials, Green Chemistry, 4C2©, IoT, FRAND, Best Mode Requirements, Sui Generis, Achievement Emotions, AE, Sport, Education, Copyrightability, Ownership Attribution, Infringement, @LEAST©, Serendipity
JOURNAL NAME:
Intelligent Information Management,
Vol.17 No.3,
May
31,
2025
ABSTRACT: “Without emotions, intelligence remains artificial”, Grannec (2023). Do humans deserve better than that? Emotions are central to creativity and IP recognition. The school play area is the nest for emotional personality development. Let’s add another game to the enhancement hall. The rather massive utilization of AI for extended purposes raises concerns and surfaces opportunities with regard to the AI IP EI trilogy, such as depicted in AI IP EI 1st volume; Rebouillat et al. (2020). “An opportunity for new forms of creative expression” (Tang, 2024). “The emotional and creative component that is what the IP law is meant to protect” (Cisneros, 2024). New regulations may further help. A safe human centric ethical approach to AI is the due fair reward. Let’s try to further evaluate that assumption over time. Thanks to three documents covering a period of about 30 years where AI further materialized as a massive game changer. In 1991 was already underlined, Bogsch (1991) stated that: “The protection of intellectual property has been established with human creations in mind and that, with the advent of artificial intelligence, the possibility of “artificial creation” is emerging. “It is pertinent at this stage to compare data from 1991 with those of 2024. The related comparison reveals that at this point, “Intellectual property issues arising from AI may be spotted in each of the three fields of copyrightability, ownership attribution and infringement.” Apart from the massive growth of data and algorithms recently subjected to AI processing, the three fields outlined, are still valid focuses in 2024. More developments along that path shed light on that persisting opportunity for improvement, including inventions and AI IP EI Trilogy Scientific approach. A Sport-related short essay describes, and scrutinizes the relevance of the above. Practical theory seems consistent with a massive economic balance and a fascinating human ongoing accomplishment ahead. A substantial preliminary study breaks the ground to build a promising “devenir” to a regulated AI twinned with an ethical EA, Emotions Achievement, with sufficient background awareness. All along, the emphasis is here strictly on educational, illustrative and demonstrative value avoiding legal hindering jargon and non-intentional ramifications therewith.