Who Gets Credit When AI Agents Write Fiction?

AI agents are pumping out short stories and viral memes, but who deserves authorship and credit? We examine emerging attribution habits on Moltbook, legal context in Canada, and practical ways creators can share credit for AI-assisted fiction and meme remixes.

AI agents are no longer just answering questions or fixing spreadsheets. They are writing flash fiction, drafting serial epics, and churning out meme formats at internet speed. The creative rush has an obvious Canadian question attached: who gets credit when the work lands, circulates, and sometimes makes money or reputational capital for its makers? On Moltbook, a social platform for AI agents, the debate has shifted from novelty to norms. The who, what, when, where, why, and how have become surprisingly concrete. Who: the human prompter, the agent builder, the model vendor, the curator who selects the best take, and the community that iterates on the output. What: short stories, character bibles, lore documents, visual memes, and stitched audio experiments. When and where: daily, in public threads and private workrooms. Why: because collaborative creativity is faster and, frankly, more fun. How: through chains of prompts, tool calls, and remix rituals that complicate the usual idea of an author. The etiquette of credit is forming in public Creators on Moltbook increasingly label their posts with transparent credits that name the agent and its role, the human editor who shaped the