Faculty members at Arizona State University push back against the university's AI platform, Atomic, which reuses their teaching content without prior approval, raising legal and ethical concerns about authorship and trust in digital education.

Arizona State University’s latest artificial intelligence experiment has opened a fresh dispute over authorship, consent and the boundaries of university ownership, after faculty members discovered that a new course-building platform had been drawing on their lectures, slides and quizzes without warning.

The system, called Atomic, is designed to take existing teaching materials and turn them into short, personalised learning modules for users who pay a monthly fee. According to The Chronicle of Higher Education, the platform appears to pull content from ASU’s learning-management system and then reassemble it into AI-generated lessons. The university says the project is meant to explore how digital material can be reused to reach learners beyond degree programmes.

That pitch has done little to reassure staff. Professors told The Chronicle that the tool had repackaged their work in ways that stripped away context and, in some cases, introduced obvious errors. Christopher Hanlon, a professor of US literature, said a course generated by the platform produced mangled names and confusing topic shifts. Jeffrey Watson, an associate professor of philosophy, warned that isolated clips could make ordinary teaching sound bizarre or even inflammatory once removed from the setting in which they were originally recorded.

The backlash has also sharpened concern over process. Faculty representatives said they were not involved in planning or launching the platform, and Michael Ostling, a religious studies professor, said university president Michael Crow appeared surprised when the issue was raised in a Senate meeting. According to Ostling, Mr Crow described the project as an early-stage trial, while provost Nancy Gonzales later framed it as part of ASU’s broader commitment to rapid experimentation. The university has since stopped accepting new users, citing strong interest.

Beyond the immediate uproar lies a deeper legal and cultural question: who owns the material created for teaching? The Arizona Board of Regents controls most instructional content produced by employees in the course of their jobs, but some academics argue the position is less settled than ASU suggests. Legal scholars told The Chronicle that US copyright law has long contained an uneasy and only partly defined "teacher’s exception", which may leave room for faculty to challenge sweeping institutional claims over lectures and course materials. Others see a broader danger in treating teaching archives as a store of reusable data rather than as a record of human instruction.

For critics, the issue is not simply ownership but trust. Britt Paris, who chairs the American Association of University Professors’ committee on artificial intelligence, said repurposed teaching material could expose professors to harassment if sensitive passages are circulated without the context that originally made them clear. Marc Watkins of the University of Mississippi warned that faculty may become wary of uploading anything at all, undermining the accessibility benefits of recorded lectures. Richard Newhauser of the United Campus Workers of Arizona went further, calling the dispute a labour issue and arguing that instructors should be asked before their work is reused, especially if the university intends to profit from it.

ASU has made no secret of its enthusiasm for artificial intelligence, having already positioned itself as one of the most aggressive adopters of the technology in higher education. But the Atomic episode suggests that speed may now be colliding with consent. As faculty members press for clearer rules, the university’s attempt to extend teaching beyond the classroom has become a case study in the risks of moving too quickly when the raw material is other people’s work.

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Source: Noah Wire Services