Artists, writers, journalists, and institutions suing AI companies for copyright theft, privacy violations, and harm. 2 cases and counting.
| Filed | Case | Defendant | Type | Status |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Apr 2025 | Thomson Reuters Enterprise Centre GmbH v. ROSS Intelligence (appeal) Thomson Reuters After the landmark February 2025 district court ruling that ROSS's use of Westlaw headnotes to train its legal AI was not fair use — the first U.S. ruling that AI training can constitute copyright infringement — ROSS app… Source ↗ | ROSS Intelligence | Copyright | ongoing |
| May 2020 | Thomson Reuters v. ROSS Intelligence Thomson Reuters Thomson Reuters sued legal AI startup ROSS Intelligence for using Westlaw content to train its AI legal research tool. In February 2024, the court ruled in Thomson Reuters's favor — the first major AI training copyright … Source ↗ | ROSS Intelligence | Copyright | won |
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.
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