Anthropic has scored a significant legal victory in an AI copyright case, with a federal judge ruling that training AI models on legally purchased books constitutes fair use. However, the company still faces a separate trial for allegedly pirating millions of books from the internet, creating a mixed outcome that could shape future AI copyright litigation.
The big picture: Judge William Alsup of the Northern District of California delivered a first-of-its-kind ruling favoring the AI industry, but with important limitations that distinguish between legitimate and illegitimate training practices.
What you should know: The ruling specifically covers Anthropic’s practice of purchasing physical books, digitizing them, and using those copies for AI training.
Why this matters: This ruling establishes a legal precedent that could influence how courts handle the growing number of AI copyright cases, while drawing clear boundaries around acceptable training practices.
The legal reasoning: Judge Alsup compared AI training to traditional education, arguing that copyright law should encourage competition rather than protect authors from it.
Where Anthropic still faces trouble: The judge ruled that storing millions of pirated book copies—even if unused for training—does not qualify for fair use protection.
The case background: Writers Andrea Bartz, Charles Graeber, and Kirk Wallace Johnson sued Anthropic last year, claiming the company trained its Claude AI models on pirated material without permission.