Pay the Blues Player
Independent creators are using AI to build real income. The question is whether they’ll define the ethics of that — or wait for industry to define it for them.
I know a publisher who has built a catalog of books using AI assistance — cover art generated by machine, text modernized and edited with AI tools, production work that would have required a small team a decade ago now handled by one person and a subscription. That catalog has generated real income over the past few years. Not quit-your-day-job money. But real money, accumulating quietly while doing something else.
Roughly fifteen percent of that income has been going to a friend who is a working digital artist. Not because a platform required it. Not because a licensing agreement mandated it. Because every AI-generated cover is a commission that didn’t go to a human artist — and this particular human artist is in exactly the cohort that absorbed that displacement most directly. The money arrives in two installments. She didn’t know the first payment was half until the second one arrived.
This is not a policy proposal. It is a thing that is already happening. And it points toward something the current AI ethics debate has almost entirely missed.

















