Fundraising

Backed by David Sacks, Garry Tan and Walter Isaacson, Created by Humans helps people license their creative work to AI models

Comment

Created by Humans
Image Credits: Created by Humans / Created by Humans

In 2024, it seems like no week goes by without a media organization, author group, or artist suing generative AI companies for using their work to train models without permission.

The issue is, of course, that there’s still no clear framework on what constitutes copyright violation in the context of training GenAI.

While these cases are bound to keep copyright lawyers busy, Created by Humans, a new company that emerged from stealth on Tuesday, aims to bypass expensive legal battles by offering a marketplace where creators can license their intellectual property directly to LLMs.

Created by Humans is the brainchild of Trip Adler, the former CEO of Scribd, a document-sharing service that morphed into a digital book and news subscription company.

Adler’s grand vision has attracted $5 million in funding from a bevy of prominent investors. The round was led by All-In podcast co-host and Craft Ventures founder David Sacks and Mike Maples, co-founder of Floodgate Fund. Other investors in the round included Jason Calacanis at LAUNCH Fund, Slow Ventures’ Sam Lessin and Garry Tan. Best-selling author Walter Isaacson also invested and joined the company as a creative advisor and inaugural author whose work AI companies can license.

Created by Humans aims to be a platform where creators of videos, images, music, and even medical data can sell licensing rights for AI training. But given Adler’s experience and relationships in the publishing world, the startup is first launching with a service for authors and book publishers.

This isn’t the only startup tackling the idea of matchmaking between content owners and LLM builders seeking training data. Another example is Human Native founded by a former Google DeepMind engineer.

As for Created by Humans, it has so far built a product — a platform allowing authors to submit their work and AI companies to purchase specific elements with predefined usage rights. Yet, the exact details of its licensing agreement are still evolving. “We’re trying to broker a three-way deal between authors, publishers and the AI industry,” Adler told TechCrunch. “It’s complicated, but we’re making great progress.”

For now, Created by Humans is proposing a philosophy called the Fourth Law, a set of guiding principles for how AI companies can use and train on human-created content. Fourth Law, inspired by science fiction author Isaac Assimov’s three laws of robots, states that humans should have the right to consent and control how AI uses their work and be compensated (if requested) and credited for their work (if a book is referenced in the output, there should be a link to buy it.)

“We want [the Fourth Law] to be the new standard for how deals work between AI companies and content owners,” Adler said. “Authors and publishers can contribute their content and manage all their content according to the Fourth Law.”

Adler expects authors to submit certain works to Created by Humans and specify how those works could be used by AI companies. Once the rights are purchased, Created by Humans would take a cut of the deal.

As an example, Walter Isaacson can choose the rights he wants to license from his books. “He can pick training rights, reference rights. He can license the style of his voice, his characters and pick which AI company he wants to license to,” Adler said. “And then Walter will get a dashboard that shows where his books are being used and how he’s making money.”

Created by Humans intends to establish a framework for a host of licensing rights from converting a book into a movie script to translating it into another language in real time, Adler said. In fact, he envisions ‘AI revenue’ as the next major force in the book industry, eclipsing even ebooks and audiobooks.

“I think this is going to reinvigorate the book industry and give a whole new reason to write a book,” Adler said.

More TechCrunch

In 2024, it seems like no week goes by without a media organization, author group, or artist suing generative AI companies for using their work to train models without permission.…

Backed by David Sacks, Garry Tan and Walter Isaacson, Created by Humans helps people license their creative work to AI models
Image Credits: Created by Humans / Created by Humans

Leveraging large languge models, Jobright created an AI agent that acts as a headhunter tailored to individual job seekers.

How Jobright uses AI to help foreign workers navigate the US job market

k-ID’s platform makes it easy for game devs to comply with child safety and data privacy regulations.

k-ID wins $45M to help game devs speedrun the child safety compliance puzzle

A relatively new startup called EvolutionaryScale has secured a massive tranche of cash to build AI models to generate novel proteins for scientific research. EvolutionaryScale today announced that it raised…

EvolutionaryScale, backed by Amazon and Nvidia, raises $142M for protein-generating AI

Don’t call this company a “ghost kitchen.” Since its Series A in 2021, Local Kitchens grew 5x and achieved unit-level profitability.

General Catalyst leads $40M round for Local Kitchens, a different kind of restaurant kitchen startup

Ashley Beckwith spent years of her academic and professional career focused on the intersection of biology, materials and manufacturing to build medical solutions more efficiently. When she realized the tech…

Foray Bioscience is breaking down the barriers of bringing biomanufacturing to plants

As generative AI touches a growing number of industries, the companies producing chips to run the models are benefitting enormously. Nvidia in particular, which commands an estimated 70% to 95%…

Etched is building an AI chip that only runs one type of model

Less than a year after closing its seed round, software-for-hardware startup Sift announced a $17.5 million Series A led by Google’s venture capital arm GV to scale their platform for…

Sift is building a better platform for analyzing hardware telemetry data

The acquisition allows Swipewipe’s founder to take some money off the table while also continuing to benefit financially from his work via an ongoing revenue-sharing agreement with MWM.

Gen Z photos app Swipewipe sells to French publisher MWM in its largest acquisition to date

As of today, nearly all of the world’s most popular website homepages are not compliant with the Web Content Accessibility Guidelines.

TestParty raises $4 million to help automate the coding for accessible websites

Uber Freight and Aurora Innovation have announced a multi-year collaboration that will see Aurora’s autonomous driving technology offered on the Uber Freight network through 2030.  The deal gives Aurora access…

Uber Freight and self driving trucks startup Aurora partner for the long haul

The European Union accused Microsoft of breaching competition rules Tuesday. In a formal statement of objections the bloc said it suspects the software giant of abusing antitrust rules by bundling…

EU accuses Microsoft of competition breach over Teams bundling

Snapchat on Tuesday announced a new suite of safety features, including updates to its account blocking functionality and enhanced friending safeguards, making it difficult for strangers to contact users on…

Snapchat introduces new safety features to limit bad actors from contacting users

Rocketlane initially aimed to support customer onboarding. However, it has broadened its scope and doubled down on addressing the needs of professional services teams.

Rocketlane snags $24M to bring AI-led experiences for professional services teams

Yelp is rolling out an app update to include more accessibility identifiers for businesses, improved screen-reader experiences, and AI-powered alt-text for images. The company said that from 2020 to 2023,…

Yelp updates app with AI-powered alt-text for images and new accessibility identifiers for businesses

The firm said on Friday that it will source talent who can solve health problems like depression, cancer, eczema and neurodegenerative diseases.

H Venture Partners launches venture studio focused on microbiome tech

The Swiss startup has closed out its Series D at $116 million, which it will use to double down on working with companies operating in Asia and the U.S.

SkyCell nabs $59M more for its greener smart pharma transport containers

Pennylane, Qonto, Agicap, Pleo and Mollie have one thing in common. They all use Chift in one way or another to manage integrations with other services. And this relatively young…

Chift lets SaaS companies integrate with dozens of financial tools with a unified API

Amazon said today that its annual Prime Day sales event will take place on July 16 and 17.

Amazon to hold Prime Day sales on July 16 and 17

Banking-as-a-service (BaaS) platforms have become instrumental in driving access to digital financial services by introducing fintech capabilities to non-bank businesses. Multiple businesses are tapping these platforms to circumvent the need…

Connect Money scores $8M to enable non-bank businesses to offer embedded finance services

Days after the Wall Street Journal reported that Apple and Meta were in talks to integrate the latter’s AI models, Bloomberg’s Mark Gurman said that the iPhone maker was not…

Apple shelved the idea of integrating Meta’s AI models over privacy concerns, report says

TechWolf has built an AI engine that ingests data from internal workflows to learn about the people doing that work.

TechWolf raises $43M to take an AI-sized bite out of the internal recruiting game

The Gurugram-based startup works with Indian factories to help them manufacture fashion wear for global brands.

India’s Zyod raises $18M to expand its tech-enabled fashion manufacturing to more countries

It’s becoming a habit to open each TechCrunch Space newsletter with a bit of an update on Boeing’s Starliner mission, so bear with me.

TechCrunch Space: Building (and testing) for the future

Featured Article

A comprehensive list of 2024 tech layoffs

The tech layoff wave is still going strong in 2024. Following significant workforce reductions in 2022 and 2023, this year has already seen 60,000 job cuts across 254 companies, according to independent layoffs tracker Layoffs.fyi. Companies like Tesla, Amazon, Google, TikTok, Snap and Microsoft have conducted sizable layoffs in the…

16 hours ago
A comprehensive list of 2024 tech layoffs

Telegram’s founder Pavel Durov says his company only employs around 30 engineers. Security experts say that raises serious questions about the company’s cybersecurity.

Telegram says it has ‘about 30 engineers’; security experts say that’s a red flag

Emergence on Monday emerged from stealth with $97.2 million in funding.

Emergence thinks it can crack the AI agent code

The Multi deal seems to fit into OpenAI’s broader recent strategy of investing heavily in enterprise solutions.

OpenAI buys a remote collaboration platform

Car dealerships and auto shops around the U.S. enter a second week of disruption following cyberattacks at software maker CDK.

Car dealership outages drag on after CDK cyberattacks

Consumer technology is hard, but few people have mastered it as well as Matt Rogers, co-founder of Nest and now Mill, his new startup that promises to turn your table…

Matt Rogers, Nest and Mill co-founder, talks mastering consumer tech at Disrupt 2024