Template-Type: ReDIF-Article 1.0
Author-Name:Nirban Bhowmick, Azib Farooq,Muhammad Adeel Asghar, Muhammad Zahid,Yasar Amin
Author-Email:muhammad.zahid@uettaxila.edu.pk
Author-Workplace-Name:Department  of  Electrical  &  Computer  Engineering,  University  of  Central  Florida,  32816, Orlando, Florida, Department of Computer Science and Engineering, Miami University, Oxford, OH 45056, USA, Computer   Science   Department,   National   University   of   Modern   Languages,   NUML Rawalpindi, Department of Telecommunication Engineering, University of Engineering and Technology, Taxila 47050, Pakistan
Title:Generative AI Ethical Challenges: By Creative and Professional Communities
Abstract:This Paper investigates the ethical transformations and creative dilemmasemerging from the  widespread  adoption  of  generative  artificial  intelligence  (GenAI)  in  content creation.  The  study  examines  attitudes  regarding  authorship,  ethical  issues,  and regulatory  rules  by  conducting  interviews  with  120  GenAI  users  from  academic, creative,  and  professional  fields.  Results  show  that  most  participants  prefer  to  give credit to co-authors or themselves when using GenAI and only a small percentage want the AI  to  have  sole  authorship.  Concerns  over  ethics  are  moderate  and  almost  always  present, reaching their highest levelconcerning liability (3.12), then labeling (3.00), and then bias (2.98) on a 5-point scale. Although individuals frequently used GenAI tools, there was no clear link between  the  amount  of  GenAI  they  used  and  their  sensitivity  to  ethics.  People  working  in creative  fields  were  more  likely  than  technologists  to  back  stronger  government  oversight. Users notice GenAI’s ability to generate fresh ideas, though they also have doubts about its accountability,  the  roles  it  plays  in knowledge,  and its  ability  to  replace  human  creativity.  It ends  by  urging  the  development  of  strategies  and  education  focused  on  ethical  principles, ensuring that technology serves society.
Keywords:Generative AI; Ethics; Authorship; Creativity; Regulation
Journal:International Journal of Innovations in Science and Technology
Pages:1290-1305
Volume:7
Issue:2
Year:2025
Month:July
File-URL:https://journal.50sea.com/index.php/IJIST/article/view/1422/1962
File-Format: Application/pdf
File-URL:https://journal.50sea.com/index.php/IJIST/article/view/1422
File-Format: text/html
Handle: RePEc:abq:IJIST:v:7:y:2025:i:2:p:1290-1305