Jasmine Birtles
Your money-making expert. Financial journalist, TV and radio personality.
And how to judge what “ethical AI” really means
The rise of AI has created exciting new opportunities for digital creators, but it’s also raised serious ethical questions. If an AI image generator was trained on thousands of artists’ work without their permission, is it fair to sell the images it creates? If a writing tool mimics the style of a famous author, is that creative, or exploitative?
As AI tools become more mainstream, it’s up to users — especially those making money — to consider where their content comes from, and how it impacts others.
So how do you make money from AI-generated work without compromising your values? And how do you know which platforms align with your own ethical standards?
This term is often vague, so we’ve defined a few key principles we believe matter for ethical use — especially when it comes to selling AI-generated work:
Principle | What It Means | Why It Matters |
---|---|---|
Transparency | The platform is clear about how it works and where its data comes from | Users and audiences should know what’s human-made vs. machine-generated |
Consent | The training data includes only work the owners allowed to be used | Many AI models are trained on copyrighted or scraped material |
Credit or Compensation | Original artists or creators are credited or paid where appropriate | This protects creative workers and encourages fair sharing |
User Rights | You have full commercial rights to the content you create | Without this, you may be legally restricted from selling your work |
No Impersonation | The tool doesn’t allow you to mimic specific individuals | This reduces deepfakes, fake voices, and stolen styles |
No AI platform is perfect — but the 10 listed below make a visible effort to address these issues. Let’s break them down.
Ethics score: 9/10
Type: Image generation (photos, illustrations, text effects)
Best for: Designers, marketers, and Adobe Creative Cloud users
Why it stands out: Trained only on Adobe Stock, open-licensed content, and public domain imagery
User rights: Commercial use is fully allowed
Transparency: Clear documentation of data sources
Bonus: Firefly now includes features to tag AI-generated content with Content Credentials
Ethics score: 8/10
Type: AI video creation and editing
Best for: Creators making YouTube, TikTok, or visual content
Why it stands out: Focus on user control and responsible visual synthesis
Training data: Claimed to be curated with copyright in mind
Commercial use: Allowed depending on tier
Notable ethics effort: Partners with artists for ethical model development
Ethics score: 8/10
Type: AI music composition
Best for: YouTubers, podcasters, musicians needing royalty-free tracks
Why it stands out: Trained on classical music and licensed datasets
Commercial use: Paid plans allow full commercial rights
Good for: Users wanting ethical, copyright-safe AI-generated music
Ethics score: 7.5/10
Type: Text-to-image, text summarising, writing prompts
Best for: Social media creators, small businesses
Why it stands out: AI features developed in partnership with ethical providers (e.g. Google, OpenAI)
Transparency: Offers clear use disclosures
User rights: Commercial use allowed on Pro plans
Limitations: Sources of training data not always specified
Ethics score: 7/10
Type: AI image generation (marketing, web visuals)
Best for: Marketers and content creators
Why it stands out: Focuses on brand-safe, non-controversial image creation
Training: Mix of licensed and open-source images
User rights: Full commercial usage with subscription
Concerns: Less detail on source datasets, but pro-business focus
Ethics score: 7/10
Type: AI-generated music with customisable elements
Best for: Creators who want original, royalty-free tracks
Why it stands out: Music is created on demand and not reused
User rights: Commercial rights granted on paid plans
Ethics: Doesn’t mimic living artists or existing songs
Bonus: Full editing control for custom tracks
Ethics score: 6.5/10
Type: Moodboards and visual concept generation
Best for: Designers, agencies, art directors
Why it stands out: You can train it only on your own visual library
Consent-friendly: No scraping of the public web
User rights: You own your trained output
Great for: Professionals who want AI without external datasets
Ethics score: 6.5/10
Type: AI image generation
Best for: Casual users, digital art hobbyists
Why it stands out: Actively encourages human curation and editing
Commercial use: Allowed with credit
Transparency: Offers options to show prompt and method
Training data: Uses various models (some with copyright concerns), but offers disclosure
Ethics score: 6/10
Type: AI-generated music
Best for: Background music for videos or live streams
Why it stands out: Trained on licensed loops and musician-submitted material
Fair model: Musicians get paid when their samples are used
Commercial use: Available on Pro plans
Bonus: Offers instant royalty-free tracks for creators
Ethics score: 6/10
Type: Research assistant for writing and idea generation
Best for: Writers, bloggers, journalists
Why it stands out: Focus on improving human reasoning, not replacing it
Training: Uses academic sources and public research
Commercial use: Mostly fair use; clarify for publication
Ethics: No fabrication or mimicry of specific voices
Some of the most popular AI tools — like Midjourney, Stable Diffusion, and OpenAI’s DALL·E — have been criticised for training on copyrighted material without consent, and for enabling impersonation or mimicry.
While they offer powerful capabilities and allow commercial use, they may not meet ethical standards around consent and credit — especially for artists concerned about exploitation.
If you use these platforms, consider:
Disclosing AI use in your listings
Avoiding direct mimicry of real artists’ styles
Using AI for ideation, then finishing manually
No platform is perfect. Even the best tools are working within a system that’s still catching up with technology. But as creators, we can make informed choices, ask tough questions, and build a creative economy that values transparency and fairness.
By supporting platforms that respect creators — both human and machine-assisted — you’re helping to shape the future of ethical AI.
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22.4.2025
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