Two recent stories have highlighted how generative artificial intelligence (AI) is impacting Indigenous language resources and intellectual property. Marci Becking of Anishinabek News discusses how AI is being used to create fraudulent language learning resources for sale online under fake author profiles. Anishinabek Nation Anishinaabemowin Coordinator Laurie McLeod-Shabogesic explained that she ordered a book from Amazon and found that the content had been generated by AI. The book was “riddled with inaccurate translations,” rendering it useless for learners. Becking reports that languages such as Plains Cree, Inuktitut, and Yurok are also being exploited. In a piece for The Conversation, Tamika Worrell (Macquarie University) highlighted how Indigenous peoples in Australia have been “largely ignored” in the development and regulation of AI; however, they are impacted through the theft of cultural intellectual property to inform AI and the misinformation being spread by AI, such as conflation of different Indigenous groups. Worrell writes that to begin to address this issue, Indigenous people must be involved in the creation, maintenance, and evaluation of these technologies.