Skip to content

JOBUZO

  • News
  • Indonesia
  • Toggle search form
Screw the money — Anthropic’s .5B copyright settlement sucks for writers

Screw the money — Anthropic’s $1.5B copyright settlement sucks for writers

Posted on 6 September 2025 By jobuzo

Around half a million writers will be eligible for a payday of at least $3,000, thanks to a historic $1.5 billion settlement in a class action lawsuit that a group of authors brought against Anthropic.

This landmark settlement marks the largest payout in the history of U.S. copyright law, but this isn’t a victory for authors — it’s yet another win for tech companies.

Tech giants are racing to amass as much written material as possible to train their LLMs, which power groundbreaking AI chat products like ChatGPT and Claude — the same products that are endangering the creative industries, even if their outputs are milquetoast. These AIs can become more sophisticated when they ingest more data, but after scraping basically the entire internet, these companies are literally running out of new information.

That’s why Anthropic, the company behind Claude, pirated millions of books from “shadow libraries” and fed them into its AI. This particular lawsuit, Bartz v. Anthropic, is one of dozens filed against companies like Meta, Google, OpenAI, and Midjourney over the legality of training AI on copyrighted works.

But writers aren’t getting this settlement because their work was fed to an AI — this is just a costly slap on the wrist for Anthropic, a company that just raised another $13 billion, because it illegally downloaded books instead of buying them.

In June, federal judge William Alsup sided with Anthropic and ruled that it is, indeed, legal to train AI on copyrighted material. The judge argues that this use case is “transformative” enough to be protected by the fair use doctrine, a carve-out of copyright law that hasn’t been updated since 1976.

News :<div>12 weeks' jail for school IT support technician who took upskirt videos of teachers</div>

“Like any reader aspiring to be a writer, Anthropic’s LLMs trained upon works not to race ahead and replicate or supplant them — but to turn a hard corner and create something different,” the judge said.

It was the piracy — not the AI training — that moved Judge Alsup to bring the case to trial, but with Anthropic’s settlement, a trial is no longer necessary.

“Today’s settlement, if approved, will resolve the plaintiffs’ remaining legacy claims,” said Aparna Sridhar, deputy general counsel at Anthropic, in a statement. “We remain committed to developing safe AI systems that help people and organizations extend their capabilities, advance scientific discovery, and solve complex problems.”

As dozens more cases over the relationship between AI and copyrighted works go to court, judges now have Bartz v. Anthropic to reference as a precedent. But given the ramifications of these decisions, maybe another judge will arrive at a different conclusion.

Screw the money — Anthropic’s $1.5B copyright settlement sucks for writers


News

Post navigation

Previous Post: Trump ditches Pentagon title, brings back War Department
Next Post: OpenAI reorganizes research team behind ChatGPT’s personality

Related Posts

Rachael Kirkconnell Says She Hasn't Had Sex for Years Despite Matt James Romance Rachael Kirkconnell Says She Hasn’t Had Sex for Years Despite Matt James Romance News
Bet365 Bonus Code WTOP365: Get $150 Bonus for NBA All-Star Game, Daytona 500, CBB News
NASA finally has a leader, but its future is no more certain NASA finally has a leader, but its future is no more certain News

Latest

  • Paris Hilton returns to Utah ‘troubled teen’ facility to support others who allege mistreatment
  • Iran opens its politically charged World Cup by playing to a 2-2 draw with New Zealand
  • ‘Don’t always see eye to eye’: Netanyahu distances himself from Trump’s Iran deal
  • Cape Verde hold Spain to surprising 0-0 draw in World Cup debut
  • This Celebrity-Loved White Boho Skirt Trend Makes Summer Outfits Look Effortless
  • Sundar Pichai faces boos, walkout at Stanford graduation ceremony over Google’s Israel, ICE ties
  • The US government’s Anthropic models ban was never about an AI jailbreak
  • US judge dismisses Musk’s xAI trade secret lawsuit against OpenAI
  • Singapore launches mayoral fellowship to share urban governance experience
  • Ebola risk for World Cup ‘extremely low’, with measles and flu bigger concerns as US steps up readiness, experts say

Copyright © 2025 JOBUZO. Disclaimers | Privacy Policies

Powered by PressBook Masonry Blogs