Space Industry and Business News
TECH SPACE
Life, Culture and AI: Why 'plagiarism' Is Our Default Operating System
file image only

Life, Culture and AI: Why 'plagiarism' Is Our Default Operating System

by Simon Mansfield
Gerroa, Australia (SPX) Nov 28, 2025

As AI models are accused of stealing the world's creativity, a deeper view emerges: life, culture - and now machines - all run on ceaseless pattern-copying, much like an extreme, accelerated form of reading. The real novelty is that humans invented the idea of "Plagiarism" with a capital P.

Biologists increasingly describe life less as a substance and more as an information process: systems that maintain themselves, replicate with variation and undergo Darwinian evolution over time. On this view, organisms are not static things but patterns that get copied, tweaked and re-copied across generations, much like a file passed through endless revisions - or a voracious reader whose mental library is constantly updated.

From this angle, all life "plagiarises" in a small-p sense: every cell, gene and organism is a remix of ancestral templates, with mutation and selection serving as editors rather than authors from nothing.

Cultural-evolution researchers extend this logic to ideas, technologies and norms, treating them as patterns that spread through social learning, bias and selection. Work on the "ratchet effect" in cumulative culture by Claudio Tennie and colleagues shows how humans copy stories, styles, tools and institutions with enough fidelity that small improvements accumulate over generations. No individual could invent modern science or the internet alone - just as no single author could write the entire training corpus for a large language model.

In this sense, human culture is driven by copying and is inherently plagiaristic with a small p: it is built on constant, mostly unconscious reuse of existing patterns, from language and music to law and religion.

Where humans diverge from other life is not in copying, but in recognising others as separate agents and attaching social meaning to who created what, especially in formal systems such as law, science and education. Cognitive and anthropological work on authorship and ownership highlights an unusual capacity to track who did what and to enforce norms of originality through copyright law, academic-integrity policies and publishing contracts.

"Plagiarism" with a capital P is a product of this institutional layer: it names a specific breach of norms inside systems that care about individual authorship, rather than a description of the underlying pattern-copying engine shared with all life. Recent scholarship, including James Hutson's article "Rethinking Plagiarism in the Era of Generative AI", argues that generative tools force a re-examination of those norms rather than of copying itself.

Generative AI models now sit squarely in this debate because they learn in a recognisably human way: by ingesting vast corpora and extracting statistical regularities that let them generate new sequences resembling their training distribution, without storing or intending to quote specific works. Legal and technical overviews of AI training emphasise that this process is about building compressed representations, not building shadow libraries of full texts.

In practice, a large language model behaves more like an automated, amnesic reader than a photocopier: it ingests works to extract patterns, not to archive or replay them verbatim. The controversial part is the industrial scale described in the U.S. Copyright Office's report "Copyright and Artificial Intelligence, Part 3: Generative AI Training", where billions of words or images are processed in ways that make the underlying copying conspicuous and legally salient.

Regulators and courts are now wrestling with whether large-scale text and data mining is a transformative, non-consumptive use akin to search indexing and corpus analysis, or an unauthorised reproduction of copyrighted works that demands consent and compensation. Practical commentary on the report highlights that this is fundamentally a fair-use and licensing question, with growing pressure to clarify how far unlicensed training can go.

Seen through the lens of pattern dynamics, AI training is not fundamentally different from what humans and other organisms do with collected experience: absorb patterns, compress them and re-emit variations. The key question is when this ordinary, small-p plagiarism - the universal copying engine of culture and life - crosses into capital-P Plagiarism, where specific, recognisable expressions are replicated or passed off in contexts that demand originality and attribution.

Legal scholars already distinguish between using works as raw data for analysis and producing outputs that are substantially similar to protected expression, with the latter far more likely to infringe. Recent work on fair use and AI training, along with position pieces from research-library organisations, explicitly likens training uses to reading and taking notes and warns against collapsing that distinction in public debate.

Reframing the AI plagiarism panic in terms of patterns clarifies what is actually at stake. At the biological and cultural level, ceaseless copying is not a bug but the operating principle that makes complexity possible - and, in machine form, it is what finally lets any connected person tap into a rough approximation of all recorded knowledge rather than being limited by their local library or budget.

Related Links
SpaceDaily News
Space Technology News - Applications and Research

Subscribe Free To Our Daily Newsletters
Tweet

RELATED CONTENT
The following news reports may link to other Space Media Network websites.
TECH SPACE
Amazon says to invest $50 bn in US government AI infrastructure
Washington (AFP) Nov 24, 2025
Amazon announced on Monday a massive $50 billion investment to expand artificial intelligence and supercomputing capabilities for the US government, positioning the tech giant as a key player in building custom AI technology for federal customers. According to a statement, the initiative will give US agencies access to advanced AI services including machine learning tools and AI chips to develop state-of-the-art software for missions ranging from cybersecurity to scientific research. The investm ... read more

TECH SPACE
Meta shares jump on report company slashing VR spending

Exploring Easter Island Quarry Now Possible with Detailed 3D Model

Faraday Effect Reveals Magnetic Role of Light in New Study

In Data Center Alley, AI sows building boom, doubts

TECH SPACE
Europe backs secure satellite communications with multibillion euro package

SpainSat NG programme completed as second secure communications satellite launches

New Laboratory Showcases Advanced Satcom Capabilities for Australian Defence Force

European Response to Escalating Space Security Crisis

TECH SPACE
TECH SPACE
Ancient 'animal GPS system' identified in magnetic fossils

Centimeter-level RTK positioning now available for IoT deployments

Nanometer precision ranging demonstrated across 113 kilometers sets new benchmark for space measurement

PntGuard delivers maritime resilience against navigation signal interference

TECH SPACE
NASA refines aircraft icing safety modeling with GlennICE software

Venezuela foreign airline ban slammed as 'disproportionate'

Indian warplane crashes at Dubai Airshow, killing pilot

NASA's X-59 soars on historic first flight, marks breakthrough for quiet supersonic travel

TECH SPACE
Amazon unveils new AI chip in battle against Nvidia

Single-photon switch could enable photonic computing

Quantum hardware roadmap highlights scaling hurdles on path to everyday applications

Japan's Rapidus plans second cutting-edge chip plant: reports

TECH SPACE
Hyperspectral Microwave Sounder Set for Launch Following Final Testing Phase

NASA, Aerospace Corporation Study Sharpens Focus on Ammonia Emissions

Copernicus Sentinel-6B enters operational phase as EUMETSAT takes command

NASA, NOAA Rank 2025 Ozone Hole as 5th Smallest Since 1992

TECH SPACE
Watchdog says rollback of EU green rules rushed, unbalanced

Trump admin aims to roll back limits on deadly air pollution

New research measures how much plastic is lethal for marine life

BHP liable for 2015 Brazil mine disaster: UK court

Subscribe Free To Our Daily Newsletters




The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2024 - Space Media Network. All websites are published in Australia and are solely subject to Australian law and governed by Fair Use principals for news reporting and research purposes. AFP, UPI and IANS news wire stories are copyright Agence France-Presse, United Press International and Indo-Asia News Service. ESA news reports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additional copyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. All articles labeled "by Staff Writers" include reports supplied to Space Media Network by industry news wires, PR agencies, corporate press officers and the like. Such articles are individually curated and edited by Space Media Network staff on the basis of the report's information value to our industry and professional readership. Advertising does not imply endorsement, agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by Space Media Network on any Web page published or hosted by Space Media Network. General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) Statement Our advertisers use various cookies and the like to deliver the best ad banner available at one time. All network advertising suppliers have GDPR policies (Legitimate Interest) that conform with EU regulations for data collection. By using our websites you consent to cookie based advertising. If you do not agree with this then you must stop using the websites from May 25, 2018. Privacy Statement. Additional information can be found here at About Us.