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Law Archive

Archives for June 2025

Did AI companies win a fight with authors? Technically

Meta and Anthropic defended AI training as fair use, but with major caveats.

Adi Robertson
Jess Weatherbed
Jess Weatherbed
Denmark is copyrighting deepfake wrongs.

The Danish government is proposing a copyright law amendment to give citizens ownership rights to their body, facial features, and voice, theoretically allowing them to demand companies to remove any AI-generated content that uses their likeness and fight for compensation.

“Human beings can be run through the digital copy machine and be misused for all sorts of purposes, and I’m not willing to accept that,” said Danish culture minister Jakob Engel-Schmidt.

Jess Weatherbed
Jess Weatherbed
Authors throw the book at Microsoft AI.

Several writers have launched a lawsuit against Microsoft over claims it used a collection of nearly 200,000 pirated books to train its Megatron artificial intelligence model to respond to user prompts. Judges have shot down similar cases that authors raised against Meta and Anthropic this week — perhaps the third time’s the charm?

Inside the courthouse reshaping the future of the internet

The US District Court in Washington, DC, was the home of two of the most important tech trials in decades — plus so much more.

Lauren Feiner
Adi Robertson
Adi Robertson
The TikTok ban is banned, again.

The incredibly weird saga of the ordered, then reversed, then passed, then upheld, then ignored, then ignored even harder attempt to ban one of America’s most popular social networks continues — as it will continue until US-China tensions cool down, everyone forgets it ever happened, or the heat death of the universe.

Lauren Feiner
Lauren Feiner
Court throws out Apple’s $300 million patent loss and sends it back for a new trial.

The dispute between Apple and Optis Wireless Technology is headed for its third trial after an appeals court threw out a 2021 jury verdict due to faulty jury instructions, Reuters reports. The case is based on Optis’ accusation that Apple infringed on its patents for LTE standard-essential technology. The damages award has already been retried once after a judge said the jury that awarded $506 million to Optis hadn’t considered the reasonableness of the amount.

Adi Robertson
Adi Robertson
“Even easy things are hard.”

Astute AI copyright observer Michael Weinberg raises some good questions about the Common Pile, an AI training dataset billed as being composed of only “openly licensed text”:

On one hand, this is an interesting effort to build a new type of training dataset that illustrates how even the “easy” parts of this process are actually hard. On the other hand, I worry that some people read “openly licensed training dataset” as the equivalent of (or very close to) “LLM free of copyright issues.”