On Tuesday, November 11, the German music industry claimed victory in a lawsuit against OpenAI, accusing the tech giant of violating copyright laws through its ChatGPT service.
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Copyright respect is a pivotal issue in the realm of generative AI. Trained on millions of data points, these models have ingested vast swathes of the internet, often without explicit permission. On Tuesday, November 11, 2025, a Munich court ruled in favor of the German music industry against AI giant OpenAI, setting a precedent for likely future legal battles. Let’s delve into the details!
German Music Takes on American AI
In November 2024, GEMA, a key representative body for the German music industry, filed a lawsuit against California-based OpenAI. GEMA accused the company of using song lyrics to train its models, which then regurgitated these lyrics to users as responses. According to GEMA, this was a clear violation of copyright laws, and the Munich court agreed, siding with the industry against the AI behemoth. “The reproduction of song lyrics in the chatbot’s results (ChatGPT, ed.) constitutes a breach of the exploitation rights protected by copyright law,” the court stated in a press release. This also applies to their use in training “linguistic models.”
While the issue of damages, sought by GEMA, remains undecided, this ruling marks a first in Europe. The decision was welcomed by many stakeholders: firstly, GEMA celebrated the “legal certainty” provided to “creators, music publishers, and platforms across Europe,” which sends a “clear message to the global tech industry.” The Association of German Journalists also commented, noting this as a “step forward for copyright law.” On the other hand, OpenAI expressed its “disagreement with the decision” to AFP, stating that it was considering “possible next steps.”
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A Legal Precedent for Europe and a Global Acceleration?
GEMA hopes that this ruling will have “repercussions well beyond Germany.” Pressure is mounting on AI model publishers. Recently, Japan’s Studio Ghibli, Bandai Namco, and Square Enix, represented by the organization CODA, called OpenAI to account for its video generator Sora. Earlier, the Motion Picture Association, which includes Disney, Universal, and Warner Bros., pressured Sam Altman and OpenAI to take immediate action against what they see as copyright violations in Sora.
AI companies have long claimed that their use of data scraping—whether from freely available or licensed sources—was legal. While some agreements were made, the unauthorized reuse of protected content has been widespread and blatant. These initial judicial decisions could significantly open the door for content publishers of all types to sue AI developers for systematic copyright and reproduction rights violations. It remains to be seen what impact these legal rulings will have on the new tech giants who have, until now, acted with impunity.
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Jordan Park writes in-depth reviews and editorial opinion pieces for Touch Reviews. With a background in UI/UX design, Jordan offers a unique perspective on device usability and user experience across smartphones, tablets, and mobile software.