Who Gets Credit When AI Invents? A Look at the History—and Future—of Inventorship

For centuries, governments have tried to encourage innovation by offering inventors something valuable in return: ownership. The earliest forms of state-recognized intellectual property—like patents—were meant to reward people for coming up with new solutions to problems. But it hasn’t always worked the way we’d like to imagine. 

From Royal Favors to Inventor Rights
Between the 14th and 17th centuries, the English crown handed out patents. But these weren’t always about protecting brilliant ideas—sometimes they were just political favors, granting monopoly rights to the well-connected.

Things began to shift in the 18th century. Under Queen Anne, inventors had to submit detailed specifications explaining how their inventions worked. This marked a move toward recognizing patents not as tools of privilege, but as protections for genuine intellectual contributions.

In the U.S., this principle was written into the Constitution. The Patent and Copyright Clause gave Congress the power to protect inventors’ rights “to promote the progress of science and the useful arts.” James Madison himself argued that useful inventions belonged to those who created them. By the late 1800s, several countries—including England, France, and Germany—had formal patent laws recognizing inventors’ intellectual ownership.

 The Core of Modern Inventorship: Conception
Today, especially in U.S. patent law, inventorship hinges on a key concept: conception. The inventor isn’t necessarily the person who builds the invention, but the one who conceives it—the one who had the original idea.

Some ground rules:

  • Only someone who contributes to the mental formulation of the invention can be an inventor.
  • There can be multiple inventors, but each must contribute to at least one claim in the patent.
  • Simply carrying out instructions or building a prototype? That’s not inventorship.

Over time, the legal system evolved from handing out monopolies to truly honoring the individuals behind technological progress—those whose ideas shaped the future.

 Then Came Generative AI
In recent years, AI has complicated things.

Autonomous AI systems can now generate ideas, designs, and even prototypes. But who’s the inventor when a machine contributes core ideas? Most global patent offices, including the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO), say only a natural person—a human—can be listed as an inventor.

The courts have backed this up. In Thaler v. Vidal, the Federal Circuit ruled that AI can’t be an inventor under current U.S. law. However, that ruling left a critical question open: What about inventions developed by humans working with AI?

 The USPTO’s 2024 AI Guidance
In early 2024, the USPTO released new guidance aimed at clarifying this gray area. The agency said that a human can be listed as an inventor of an AI-assisted invention if they make a “significant contribution” to the final invention—even if they didn’t fully conceive it.

This marks a shift. Under this standard, a person could take AI-generated output, shape it meaningfully, and claim inventorship—even if their input alone wouldn’t qualify as an invention.

Legal Risks on the Horizon
This softer standard raises eyebrows in the legal community. Critics argue it contradicts patent law’s long-standing requirement of full human conception. And because USPTO guidance doesn’t carry the force of law, patents issued under this standard might not hold up in court.

There’s also risk for patent attorneys. Filing patents based on this weakened inventorship standard could raise ethical issues under the duty of disclosure rules, especially if the AI did most of the heavy lifting.

And here’s a surprising twist: the USPTO’s standard for inventorship may now be lower than the standard for patentability itself.

Looking Ahead
We’re at a crossroads. On one hand, AI is a powerful tool for accelerating innovation. On the other, our current legal framework still centers on human inventorship.

Without new legislation or clearer judicial rulings, this tension will likely grow. For now, inventors, companies, and patent attorneys should tread carefully. The future of inventorship in the AI era is still being written—and it’s far from settled.