CO/AI Subscribe
Tuesday · June 16, 2026 · Issue No. 897
Video

Sarah Silverman, other authors lose AI copyright case against Meta

Watch on YouTube

AI copyright case against Meta stumbles

In a significant legal development that could shape the future of AI training on copyrighted works, comedian Sarah Silverman and several authors have faced a major setback in their lawsuit against Meta. The case centered on claims that Meta's large language models were trained on their copyrighted books without permission, but a federal judge has dismissed most of their claims, delivering a blow to creators concerned about AI's use of their intellectual property.

The ruling highlights the evolving intersection of copyright law and artificial intelligence, raising profound questions about what constitutes fair use in the digital age. As AI systems continue to ingest vast amounts of human-created content to improve their capabilities, this case represents just one battle in what promises to be a prolonged legal war over creative ownership in the AI era.

Key insights from the case

  • Judge Araceli Martinez-Olguin dismissed the authors' direct copyright infringement claims, ruling they failed to demonstrate that Meta's AI models actually reproduced their specific works

  • The judge left intact a claim regarding the LLaMA training dataset containing the plaintiffs' books, but dismissed claims about the models themselves containing copyrighted material

  • The ruling distinguished between the data used to train AI and the output these models produce, creating an important legal distinction that may influence future cases

Why this matters more than you think

The most significant takeaway from this ruling is the emerging legal framework distinguishing between training data and AI outputs. Judge Martinez-Olguin essentially created a bifurcated approach to AI copyright analysis: the training dataset might contain copyrighted material (still potentially actionable), but the resulting AI model itself doesn't necessarily "contain" those works in a way that constitutes copyright infringement.

This distinction carries enormous implications for the AI industry. By creating this separation between training inputs and model outputs, the court has potentially carved out a significant safe harbor for AI developers. Tech companies like Meta, Google, and OpenAI have built their models by ingesting massive amounts of text from the internet and published works. If this ruling stands and is followed by other courts, it could significantly reduce their legal exposure—a development that would accelerate AI development while potentially undermining creators' control over how their works are used.

What the ruling missed

The court's approach, while technically sound under current copyright frameworks, overlooks a

Share: X LinkedIn Email
Video Feed

More videos

All videos →
Claude Fable 5: When Capability Meets Economics
Video

Claude Fable 5: When Capability Meets Economics

Anthropic released Cloud Fable 5 with a paradox built in: safeguards sophisticated enough to let a mythosclass model...

Run Agentic AI Entirely on Your Mac—No Cloud, No Latency, No Privacy Tradeoffs
Video

Run Agentic AI Entirely on Your Mac—No Cloud, No Latency, No Privacy Tradeoffs

Apple’s MLX framework is mature enough now that you can run serious agentic AI workflows locally on Silicon...

Hermes Agent Master Class
Video

Hermes Agent Master Class

Welcome to the Hermes Agent Master Class — an 11-episode series taking you from zero to fully leveraging...

SIGNAL / NOISE

All Signal.
No Noise.

One concise email a day. Curated by Anthony Batt & Harry DeMott.

Free. Unsubscribe anytime.