Plagiarism is the act of taking credit for the creativity or work of another. That includes taking credit for the work of generative AI.
https://www.plagiarismtoday.com/2026/02/03/if-you-dont-disclose-ai-youre-a-plagiarist/
Plagiarism is the act of taking credit for the creativity or work of another. That includes taking credit for the work of generative AI.
https://www.plagiarismtoday.com/2026/02/03/if-you-dont-disclose-ai-youre-a-plagiarist/
@plagiarismtoday Good argument, and I like the connection with what happened with Moltbook recently. Question, I have used Lightroom mobile app to analyze RAW photos I took on my phone to give me AI suggested "filters." I can also tweak the settings it makes to further change them or ask it to suggest similar filters to one I like. Do you think this would be something I should disclose? (some of these images are on my account)
@CallMePlayer It's a tough question.
To me, what you describe sounds like you're using AI to assist with editing. in some fields, editors are disclosed, think films (and those really long credits) and songs. But they haven't historically been in photography.
So as long as you are the final judge, I don't think it's necessary. But, obviously, it's a gray area and the more "control" the AI has to make decisions, the more I would encourage disclosure.