Artists, writers, journalists, and institutions suing AI companies for copyright theft, privacy violations, and harm. 1 cases and counting.
| Filed | Case | Defendant | Type | Status |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sep 2024 | FTC v. DoNotPay (deceptive 'robot lawyer' claims) Federal Trade Commission The FTC charged DoNotPay with deceptive advertising for marketing an AI service as 'the world's first robot lawyer' without testing whether it actually performed to the level of a human attorney. The company paid $193,00… Source ↗ | DoNotPay Inc. | Consumer_protection | settled |
Plaintiffs in AI copyright cases are primarily seeking statutory damages (up to $150,000 per willful infringement), injunctive relief to halt AI companies from using copyrighted training data, and disgorgement of profits tied to infringing practices. Most cases are still working through discovery and motions practice — no major case has reached a final plaintiff victory at the merits level as of mid-2026.
AI assistants in group chats risk exposing private info to all members, impacting privacy for users and families.
Read analysis PRIVACYComputer-use agents pose privacy risks by mishandling personal data across apps, affecting everyday users. Learn how to safeguard your info.
Read analysis PRIVACYAI analysis of social media posts can expose private details, impacting privacy for users. Learn how to protect yourself.
Read analysisTell us what tools, data, checklists, or workflow would make your experience better.