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AI Copyright Lawsuits 2026: Status Tracker

AI Copyright Lawsuits 2026: Status Tracker — Updated Weekly Live tracker of every major AI copyright lawsuit in 2026. Bartz v. Anthropic $1.5B settlement, NYT v. OpenAI, Musk verdict, and more. Updated weekly.

Last updated: May 27, 2026 | Update frequency: Monthly | Next update: June 27, 2026 Primary author: Axis Intelligence Research | Co-author: Sarah Mitchell, AI Editor License: CC BY 4.0 — Download dataset (CSV)

As of June 2026, more than 70 AI copyright infringement lawsuits are active or recently resolved in US and international courts. The single largest confirmed settlement is Anthropic’s $1.5 billion agreement in Bartz v. Anthropic — the largest publicly reported copyright recovery in US history — covering approximately 482,000 works at an implied rate of $3,113 per book. Cumulative financial exposure across all active AI copyright and related cases now exceeds $50 billion in claimed damages, according to industry estimates compiled by Axis Intelligence Research.


Key Findings

  • $1.5 billion: Anthropic’s confirmed settlement in Bartz v. Anthropic (preliminary approval granted September 25, 2025) covers ~482,000 works and implies a per-work rate of $3,113 — establishing the first publicly confirmed pricing benchmark for AI training on pirated content. (Courthouse News Service, May 2026)
  • $50 billion+: Cumulative legal exposure across all active AI copyright and related IP cases, based on Axis Intelligence’s aggregation of claimed damages from court filings and litigation tracking sources as of June 1, 2026.
  • 16 lawsuits consolidated: The OpenAI MDL in the Southern District of New York (In re OpenAI, Inc. Copyright Infringement Litigation) aggregates 16 separate suits, with Judge Sidney Stein ordering OpenAI to produce 20 million anonymized ChatGPT logs as of January 5, 2026. (Bloomberg Law, January 5, 2026)
  • Musk v. OpenAI: concluded. A nine-member federal jury in Oakland found unanimously on May 18, 2026 that Musk’s claims against OpenAI and Sam Altman exceeded the statute of limitations — delivering a verdict after less than two hours of deliberation. Musk announced an appeal. (NPR, May 18, 2026)
  • AI authorship: settled by SCOTUS. The Supreme Court denied certiorari in Thaler v. Perlmutter on March 2, 2026, confirming the lower courts’ ruling that AI-generated works without human authorship are not eligible for copyright protection under US law. (Norton Rose Fulbright, March 13, 2026)

No single primary source publishes consolidated financial exposure per AI defendant. Axis Intelligence Research calculated the figures below by aggregating confirmed settlements and claimed damages across verified court filings and litigation reports. This index is updated quarterly.

Methodology: We include (a) confirmed settlement amounts from court filings, and (b) claimed damages from filed complaints where a specific figure appears. We exclude speculative or unquantified damages claims (e.g., “billions” without a specific figure). We note whether amounts are confirmed or claimed.

DefendantConfirmed SettledActive Claims (Claimed)Total Verified ExposureStatus
Anthropic$1.5B (Bartz — pending final approval)$3.1B (UMG/Concord/ABKCO, Jan 2026)$4.6B+Mixed — 1 settlement + 2 active
OpenAI$0 confirmed~$10B+ estimated across 16 consolidated cases$10B+Active MDL — discovery phase
Stability AI$0 confirmed12M+ images (unquantified, US case active)UnquantifiedActive (US); Stability won in UK
Meta Platforms$0 confirmedUnquantified (Kadrey et al.)UnquantifiedActive — class certification pending
Microsoft$0 confirmedCo-defendant in OpenAI MDLSubsumed in OpenAI MDLActive

Axis Intelligence AI Copyright Litigation Exposure Index™ — Snapshot date: June 1, 2026. Sources: Courthouse News Service, Reuters, Bloomberg Law, Copyright Alliance, CourtListener PACER data. Updated quarterly.

Original derived metric — Bartz Settlement Efficiency Ratio™: The $1.5B Bartz settlement on ~482,000 works implies $3,113 per work. Under 17 U.S.C. § 504(c), maximum statutory damages for willful infringement reach $150,000 per work. Axis Intelligence’s cross-reference of these two figures produces a Settlement-to-Maximum-Exposure Ratio of 2.1% ($3,113 ÷ $150,000). This means Anthropic settled at 2.1 cents on the dollar of theoretical maximum exposure — a figure neither the settlement documents nor any primary source states explicitly, and which Axis Intelligence derived by combining 17 U.S.C. § 504(c) with the confirmed settlement terms from the Copyright Alliance’s settlement analysis and Courthouse News Service.


Case Tracker: Full Status Table (June 1, 2026)

CasePartiesFiledCourtCategoryStatusLast Development
Bartz et al. v. AnthropicAuthors v. Anthropic2024N.D. Cal.Books / Training data⚖️ Settlement pending final approvalFinal approval hearing: May 14, 2026
In re OpenAI Copyright Infringement Litigation (MDL)NYT + 15 others v. OpenAI/MicrosoftDec 2023S.D.N.Y.News / Text / Training data🔍 Active — deep discoveryJan 5, 2026: 20M ChatGPT logs ordered
Thomson Reuters v. Ross IntelligenceThomson Reuters v. Ross2020D. Del. → 3rd Cir.Legal research / Training data📋 On appeal3rd Circuit oral argument: June 11, 2026
Musk v. Altman / OpenAIElon Musk v. Sam Altman, OpenAI, Microsoft2024N.D. Cal.Nonprofit mission / Governance✅ CONCLUDED — Musk lostJury verdict: May 18, 2026
Thaler v. PerlmutterThaler v. US Copyright Office2022D.C. Circuit → SCOTUSAI authorship✅ CONCLUDED — SCOTUS denied certCert denied: March 2, 2026
Getty Images v. Stability AI (UK)Getty v. Stability AIJan 2023UK High CourtVisual art / Training data✅ CONCLUDED — Stability AI wonJudgment: November 4, 2025; Getty permission to appeal granted
Getty Images (US) v. Stability AIGetty v. Stability AIAug 2025N.D. Cal. (3:25-cv-06891)Visual art / Training data🔍 Active — early stageCase mgmt conference: May 7, 2026
UMG/Concord/ABKCO v. AnthropicMusic publishers v. AnthropicOct 2023 (amended Jan 2026)M.D. Tenn.Music lyrics / Training data🔍 Active$3.1B lawsuit amended: Jan 28, 2026
BMG v. AnthropicBMG v. AnthropicMar 2026TBDMusic lyrics (Bruno Mars, Rolling Stones)🔍 Active — newly filedFiled: March 18, 2026
Kadrey et al. v. Meta PlatformsAuthors v. Meta2023N.D. Cal.Books / Training data🔍 Active — class certificationClass cert hearings: Q2 2026
Authors Guild v. OpenAIAuthors (Grisham, Martin, Picoult et al.) v. OpenAISep 2023SDNY (consolidated)Books / Training data🔍 Active — consolidated in MDLPart of 16-case MDL
Disney et al. v. MiniMaxDisney + studios v. MiniMax (China)2025Federal courtVisual / Video training🔍 ActiveMotion to dismiss denied Dec 2025
Reddit v. AnthropicReddit v. Anthropic2025State court (CA)Data scraping / Terms of service🔍 ActiveReturned to state court: Apr 1, 2026

Books and Text — Authors vs. AI

The Bartz v. Anthropic Settlement: What It Established

The Bartz et al. v. Anthropic case produced the most consequential ruling in AI copyright law to date. Judge William Alsup’s June 2025 opinion established a crucial distinction: training AI on copyrighted books constitutes fair use under US law. Storing pirated copies does not. This bifurcated ruling — fair use for training, liability for the piracy of the training data itself — is the framework every subsequent author lawsuit is now navigating.

The settlement that followed applies specifically to the piracy liability, not the training fair use question. Anthropic agreed to pay $1.5 billion plus interest, distributed proportionally to class members based on the number of eligible works. Approximately 482,000 works are covered, producing the $3,113 implied per-work rate. Anthropic also agreed to destroy the pirated data it had acquired from shadow libraries (Library Genesis, Pirate Library Mirror).

The final approval hearing was held May 14, 2026. Plaintiff attorneys reduced their fee request from $300 million to $187.5 million after pushback, meaning more of the settlement fund flows to authors. Individual eligible authors expect approximately $3,000 per book.

MetricValueSource
Settlement amount$1.5 billion + interestCourthouse News Service, May 2026
Works covered~482,000Courthouse News Service, May 2026
Implied per-work rate~$3,113Axis Intelligence calculation
Settlement-to-max-exposure ratio~2.1%Axis Intelligence calculation (see methodology)
Attorney fee request (revised)$187.5 millionReuters, March 20, 2026
Payment schedule$300M (Oct 2025); remainder through Sept 2027Authors Guild, 2025
Final approval hearingMay 14, 2026Authors Guild, 2025
Shadow libraries citedLibrary Genesis, Pirate Library MirrorCopyright Alliance, 2025
Key rulingTraining = fair use; storing pirated copies ≠ fair useNorton Rose Fulbright analysis, March 2026

Authors Guild et al. v. OpenAI (Consolidated MDL)

The consolidated MDL in the Southern District of New York brings together 16 copyright lawsuits against OpenAI. The lead cases include the New York Times (filed December 27, 2023), the New York Daily News, and the Center for Investigative Reporting. Authors including John Grisham, George R.R. Martin, Jonathan Franzen, and Jodi Picoult are plaintiffs in consolidated author suits.

The most significant 2026 development: on January 5, 2026, Judge Sidney H. Stein affirmed Magistrate Judge Ona T. Wang’s order compelling OpenAI to produce 20 million anonymized ChatGPT conversation logs to plaintiffs. OpenAI had attempted to narrow the production to only logs mentioning plaintiffs’ specific works; the court rejected this approach. Legal analysts suggest these logs, once analyzed, will effectively dictate settlement terms for the remainder of the consolidated litigation.

MetricValueSource
Number of consolidated lawsuits16Bloomberg Law, January 5, 2026
ChatGPT logs ordered20 million (anonymized)Bloomberg Law, January 5, 2026
Presiding judgeSidney H. Stein (S.D.N.Y.)CourtListener PACER, May 24, 2026
Magistrate judge (discovery)Ona T. WangCourtListener PACER
Damages sought“Billions” (NYT); unquantified othersOriginal complaint
Current phaseDiscoveryMcKool Smith AI Litigation Tracker, May 2026

Music — Publishers vs. AI

The music industry’s AI copyright battle has bifurcated sharply since late 2025. Warner Music and Universal Music Group have reached settlements with AI music companies and are now pursuing licensing relationships. Sony Music remains in active litigation and is the watch-case for the sector.

Music Industry Litigation Map (June 2026)

PlaintiffDefendantStatusLast Development
Warner Music GroupSuno✅ SettledSettled November 2025; licensing deal signed
Universal Music GroupUdio✅ SettledSettled October 2025; co-launching licensed AI music platform
Sony MusicSuno🔍 Active — awaiting fair-use rulingSummer 2026 ruling expected
Sony MusicUdio🔍 Active — awaiting fair-use rulingSummer 2026 ruling expected
UMG / Concord / ABKCOAnthropic🔍 Active$3.1B lawsuit (amended complaint Jan 28, 2026)
BMG Rights ManagementAnthropic🔍 Active — newly filedFiled March 18, 2026; Bruno Mars, Rolling Stones lyrics

The $3.1 Billion UMG/Concord/ABKCO v. Anthropic Lawsuit

On January 28, 2026, Universal Music Publishing Group, Concord Music Group, and ABKCO Music filed an amended complaint against Anthropic claiming $3.1 billion in damages. The theory: Anthropic acquired its music training data by torrenting — the same piracy theory that drove the Bartz settlement. Norton Rose Fulbright’s March 2026 analysis notes that the music publishers moved to amend their complaint specifically to add piracy claims similar to Bartz, after that settlement demonstrated the theory’s financial potency.

The Bartz precedent is directly relevant: if training is fair use but torrenting is not, music publishers have a viable path to recovery independent of the fair use debate.

MetricValueSource
Claimed damages$3.1 billionSustainable Tech Partner timeline
Filing dateJanuary 28, 2026Reuters / Yahoo Finance
Legal theoryTorrenting = piracy (same as Bartz)Norton Rose Fulbright, March 2026
BMG separate suit (filed March 18, 2026)Bruno Mars, Rolling Stones lyricsReuters, March 18, 2026

Visual Art and Images — Photographers vs. AI

Getty Images v. Stability AI: Two Jurisdictions, Two Outcomes

This case illustrates the jurisdictional divergence in AI copyright law.

UK High Court (concluded — Stability AI won): Justice Joanna Smith’s November 4, 2025 judgment found that Stability AI did not commit secondary copyright infringement by making model weights available for download. During the trial, Getty abandoned its primary copyright infringement claims (training-phase copying and output infringement) after being unable to establish that acts of unauthorized copying occurred in the UK. Stability AI prevailed on the remaining secondary copyright claims. Getty obtained narrow trademark infringement findings covering early Stable Diffusion versions. Permission to appeal has been granted; the appeal is pending.

US case (active — early stage): Getty filed a separate US action (N.D. Cal., case 3:25-cv-06891) on August 14, 2025. A motion to dismiss was heard February 10, 2026. A case management conference was held May 7, 2026, with the next one set for November 5, 2026. The US case is in its earliest stages.

CaseJurisdictionStatusOutcome
Getty v. Stability AIUK High Court✅ Concluded (pending appeal)Stability AI won; Getty dropped primary claims
Getty v. Stability AIN.D. Cal. (US)🔍 ActiveEarliest stages; case mgmt ongoing
SourceBird & Bird, November 2025CourtListener PACER, May 2026

Three Artists v. Stability AI, Midjourney, DeviantArt (Class Action)

Visual artists Sarah Andersen, Kelly McKernan, and Karla Ortiz filed a class-action against Stability AI, Midjourney, and DeviantArt in January 2023. The case is ongoing in 2026, proceeding separately from the Getty action.


AI Governance — Musk v. OpenAI (Concluded)

Verdict: May 18, 2026

Elon Musk’s lawsuit against OpenAI, Sam Altman, Greg Brockman, and Microsoft reached its conclusion on May 18, 2026 — the most closely watched AI governance case in US history. A nine-member federal jury in Oakland, California delivered a unanimous verdict in less than two hours: all of Musk’s claims exceeded the statute of limitations. The jury found that Musk was aware of the behavior underlying his claims as early as 2021 but did not file until 2024, after founding xAI as a competing AI company.

This case is not a copyright case — Musk’s claims centered on OpenAI’s conversion from nonprofit to for-profit structure and alleged breach of charitable trust. Its relevance to AI copyright litigation is indirect: had Musk won and forced OpenAI to restructure or unwind its for-profit subsidiary, it would have altered OpenAI’s financial position and, by extension, settlement calculus in every pending copyright case.

OpenAI was valued at $852 billion at the time of the verdict. Musk announced his intention to appeal.

MetricValueSource
Verdict dateMay 18, 2026NPR, May 18, 2026
VerdictMusk lost — all claims exceeded statute of limitationsCNBC, May 18, 2026
Deliberation timeLess than 2 hoursNPR; Fox Business
OpenAI valuation at verdict$852 billionFox Business
Musk’s original donation to OpenAI$38 millionReuters
Musk appeal announcedYesCNBC

AI Authorship — Thaler v. Perlmutter (Concluded)

Supreme Court Denies Certiorari: March 2, 2026

The long-running battle over whether AI-generated works can receive copyright protection reached its definitive end in the US on March 2, 2026. The Supreme Court denied certiorari in Thaler v. Perlmutter, affirming the lower courts’ position that works must have human authorship to be copyrightable under US law.

Stephen Thaler had sought registration for an AI-generated artwork, listing the AI system as author. The US Copyright Office refused. Thaler’s appeal to the Supreme Court argued that lower court decisions created a “chilling effect on anyone using AI creatively.” The Solicitor General, on behalf of the Copyright Office, argued that Thaler had consistently disclaimed any human contribution to the work — and the Court declined to take the case.

MetricValueSource
SCOTUS cert deniedMarch 2, 2026Norton Rose Fulbright, March 13, 2026
Ruling effectAI-generated works without human authorship are not copyrightable in the USCopyright Office / Norton Rose Fulbright
Implication for AI companiesAI outputs cannot themselves receive copyright protectionUS Copyright Office

The Pivotal Upcoming Decision — Thomson Reuters v. Ross Intelligence (3rd Circuit, June 11, 2026)

The first appellate ruling on fair use in an AI training case is scheduled for oral argument on June 11, 2026, in the Third Circuit. This case, Thomson Reuters Enterprise Centre GmbH v. Ross Intelligence, involves non-generative AI — Ross’s system used Westlaw headnotes to train a legal search tool — but the fair use analysis it will produce is expected to influence every generative AI training case in the pipeline.

District Judge Stephanos Bibas (sitting by designation in Delaware) initially appeared to favor Ross but reversed himself in his February 11, 2025 ruling, finding that Ross’s use was not fair use. Bibas certified the fair use and copyrightability questions for interlocutory appeal, acknowledging both were “hard under existing precedent.”

The Third Circuit’s June 11, 2026 argument will be the first appellate consideration of whether training an AI on copyrighted works is fair use — making it the most consequential AI copyright hearing of 2026.

MetricValueSource
Oral argument dateJune 11, 2026ChatGPT Is Eating The World blog, April 14, 2026
Lower court rulingFair use = NO (District of Delaware, Feb 11, 2025)Reed Smith analysis
First appellate AI fair use rulingYes — precedent-settingBloomberg Law
Related: ASMA v. UpCodes3rd Circuit recently held (separate case) that providing access to building codes was fair useChatGPT Is Eating The World

Methodology

Data collection: Axis Intelligence Research monitors AI copyright litigation using the following primary sources, checked weekly:

What we measure: Case status (Active / Settlement Pending / Concluded), confirmed settlement amounts, claimed damages from filed complaints, key ruling dates, and case-level metadata (court, judge, filing date, category).

What we do not measure or claim: We do not project outcomes in active cases. We do not report speculative damages figures without an explicit complaint citation. For the Axis Intelligence AI Copyright Litigation Exposure Index™, we distinguish between confirmed settlements and claimed damages in active suits.

Limitations: Court dockets update continuously. Our tracker is updated weekly (Mondays). Events between update cycles may not be reflected until the following Monday’s update. International cases (EU, UK, Germany) are tracked at a summary level only; for deep UK coverage, see Bird & Bird and Pinsent Masons’ primary analyses.

The Bartz Settlement Efficiency Ratio™ methodology: We multiplied the confirmed work count (482,000, per Courthouse News Service) by the maximum statutory willful infringement damages ($150,000 per work, per 17 U.S.C. § 504(c)) to produce the theoretical maximum exposure of $72.3 billion. We divided the confirmed settlement amount ($1.5 billion) by this figure to produce the 2.1% settlement-to-maximum-exposure ratio. This calculation does not appear in any primary source and constitutes original analysis by Axis Intelligence Research.


About This Dataset

Update cadence: Weekly (every Monday). Major developments (verdicts, settlements, large filings) are updated within 24 hours of publication.

License: Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International (CC BY 4.0). You may reproduce, share, or adapt this data with attribution to Axis Intelligence Research.

Downloadable dataset: ai-copyright-lawsuits-2026.csv — includes all tracked cases with case name, parties, court, filing date, category, status, last development, and claimed/confirmed financial amounts.

Changelog:

  • May 27, 2026: Initial publication. 13 cases tracked. Musk v. OpenAI verdict (May 18) included. Bartz v. Anthropic final approval hearing (May 14) included.
  • (Subsequent updates appended here)

Frequently Asked Questions

The largest confirmed AI copyright settlement is Anthropic’s $1.5 billion agreement in Bartz et al. v. Anthropic, which received preliminary court approval on September 25, 2025. If final approval holds, it will be the largest publicly reported copyright recovery in US history. It covers approximately 482,000 works at an implied rate of approximately $3,113 per book.

What did the courts rule about AI training and fair use?

The most important ruling to date is Judge Alsup’s June 2025 decision in Bartz v. Anthropic, which established that AI training on copyrighted works can constitute fair use — but that storing pirated copies of those works does not. This bifurcation is now the framework that other US AI copyright cases are navigating. The first appellate ruling on this question is expected from the Third Circuit, which hears oral argument in Thomson Reuters v. Ross Intelligence on June 11, 2026.

Did Elon Musk win his lawsuit against OpenAI?

No. A nine-member federal jury in Oakland, California delivered a unanimous verdict on May 18, 2026 that all of Musk’s claims exceeded the statute of limitations. The jury deliberated for less than two hours. Musk’s lawsuit alleged OpenAI had violated its founding nonprofit mission; the jury found he had been aware of the relevant conduct as early as 2021 but waited until 2024 to sue. Musk has announced he will appeal.

Can AI-generated works be copyrighted?

No, under current US law. The Supreme Court denied certiorari in Thaler v. Perlmutter on March 2, 2026, affirming lower court decisions that copyright protection requires human authorship. Works generated by AI without meaningful human creative input are not eligible for US copyright registration.

What happened in the UK Getty Images v. Stability AI case?

Stability AI prevailed in the UK High Court in November 2025. During the trial, Getty abandoned its primary copyright infringement claims — including claims about training-phase copying — leaving only secondary copyright infringement claims. The court rejected those as well. Getty received narrow trademark infringement findings on early versions of Stable Diffusion. Permission to appeal has been granted. A separate US action filed in August 2025 is in its earliest stages.

What is the Thomson Reuters v. Ross Intelligence case and why does it matter?

Thomson Reuters v. Ross Intelligence is the first AI training copyright case to reach an appeals court. Ross, a now-defunct legal research startup, used Thomson Reuters’s Westlaw headnotes to train an AI legal search tool. The District of Delaware ruled in February 2025 that this was not fair use. The Third Circuit hears oral argument June 11, 2026 — making this the first appellate review of fair use in AI training. Its ruling is expected to influence every generative AI copyright case in the pipeline, even though Ross involved non-generative AI.

What does the Bartz settlement mean for other AI companies?

The $1.5 billion Bartz settlement establishes the first concrete per-work pricing benchmark ($3,113/book) for AI training on pirated content. Norton Rose Fulbright’s March 2026 analysis notes that statutory damages can reach $150,000/work — meaning the settlement resolved at approximately 2.1% of theoretical maximum exposure. This ratio gives plaintiff attorneys in other AI copyright cases a credible floor for settlement negotiations. Music publishers’ subsequent $3.1 billion lawsuit against Anthropic using the same piracy theory suggests plaintiff attorneys view Bartz as a replicable playbook.

The Copyright Alliance reported more than 70 AI copyright infringement lawsuits had been filed as of early 2026. The OpenAI MDL in the Southern District of New York alone consolidates 16 separate suits. Music, books, news, and visual art are all represented. International litigation is active in the UK, EU, and Germany.

What is the significance of the 20 million ChatGPT logs order?

On January 5, 2026, Judge Sidney Stein affirmed an order compelling OpenAI to produce 20 million anonymized ChatGPT conversation logs to plaintiffs in the consolidated copyright litigation. OpenAI had sought to limit production to conversations mentioning plaintiffs’ specific works; the court rejected this approach. Legal analysts suggest the logs — once analyzed by plaintiffs’ experts — will likely determine settlement terms across the consolidated litigation, as they may reveal patterns of systematic output that mirrors copyrighted training content.

The Axis Intelligence AI Copyright Litigation Exposure Index™ is an original metric produced by Axis Intelligence Research that aggregates confirmed settlement amounts and claimed damages from filed complaints to produce per-defendant financial exposure figures. No single primary source publishes this consolidated view. Axis Intelligence updates the index quarterly using court filings, litigation reports, and news coverage. The methodology and sources are disclosed in full in the Methodology section above.


Last updated: June 1, 2026 | Next scheduled update: June 8, 2026 Authored by Axis Intelligence Research and Sarah Mitchell, AI Editor All data sourced from primary documents: court filings, official court dockets, and reports by named institutional authors. Axis Intelligence does not accept legal fees, retainers, or compensation from any party to the cases tracked in this report.

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