SUBSCRIBE FOR FULL CONTENT ACCESS: VIEW OFFERS
Connect with us

Litigation

Munich Regional Court holds oral proceedings in the case GEMA brought against AI song generator Suno

Published

on

German music rights society GEMA was given the opportunity to present its copyright infringement case against AI music generator Suno, during oral proceedings at Munich's Regional Court. This is the first case in Europe to focus on the use of audio content by AI companies. GEMA filed a lawsuit against Suno on January 21, 2025 with the Regional Court in Munich "to enforce the rights of its member." GEMA accused Suno of having used, stored, and reproduced protected recordings of songs from the GEM...

A paid subscription is required to read more.
Log in below, or UPGRADE / SUBSCRIBE.

Emmanuel is a Washington, DC-based freelance journalist, blogger and media consultant, specialising in the entertainment business and cultural trends. He was the US editor for British music industry trade publication Music Week. Previously, he was the editor of Impact, a magazine for the music publishing community (2007-2009), the global editor of US trade publication Billboard (2003-2006), and the editor in chief of Billboard’s sister publication Music & Media (1997-2003).

Litigation

Ankit Sahni sues US Copyright Office for rejecting the registration of a work created with AI

Published

on

Ankit Sahni, the author of an artwork titled 'Suryast' created by taking one of his pictures a sunset over a building and mashing it with a Vincent Van Gogh painting using an artificial intelligence application, the RAGHAV Artificial Painting App, has filed a lawsuit against Shira Perlmutter, in her official capacity as Register of Copyrights and Director of the United States Copyright Office, for rejecting multiple times his application to have his artwork officially registered. The lawsuit was...

A paid subscription is required to read more.
Log in below, or UPGRADE / SUBSCRIBE.

Continue Reading

Collective Management Organisations

High Court affirms the need for an IPRS license covering compositions when communicating recordings to the public

Published

on

The Calcutta High Court has found in favour of the Indian Performing Right Society (IPRS) by dismissing telecom provider Vodafone Idea's appeal of a lower court decision which ruled that a separate license from IPRS is required for underlying music and lyrics from recordings when they are communicated to the public. IPRS Chairman Javed Akhtar welcomed the ruling. “We are delighted with this decision and thank the Hon’ble Court for this stellar Judgement," said Akhtar. "It is a landmark moment wh...

A paid subscription is required to read more.
Log in below, or UPGRADE / SUBSCRIBE.

Continue Reading

Litigation

Publishers file putative class action suit against Meta and CEO Mark Zuckerberg for infringing textual works to train AI models

Published

on

Book publishing houses Elsevier, Cengage Learning, Hachette Book Group, Macmillan Publishing Group and McGraw Hill, alongside author Scott Turow, have filed a putative class action lawsuit in the US District Court for the Southern District of New York against Meta and its founder and CEO Mark Zuckerberg for willful copyright infringement of millions of textual works, including literature, educational works, and scholarly articles, that have allegedly been used to develop Meta’s Llama large langu...

A paid subscription is required to read more.
Log in below, or UPGRADE / SUBSCRIBE.

Continue Reading

Trending