By , June 22, 2026.

Should fair use give an advantage to certain business models?

The obvious answer is no. All things being otherwise equal, fair use should not privilege the use of copyrighted works merely because of the business model adopted by the user. That is, independent of the purpose and character of the use and the effect of the use upon the potential market for or value of the copyrighted work, the choice of business model by the user should not weigh in favor of fair use.

But a recent Third Circuit decision appears to have done just that.

In American Society for Testing Materials (ASTM) v. UpCodes, the court in April considered whether the copying of ASTM’s copyrighted building codes by for-profit startup UpCodes was permitted by fair use.1No. 24-2965 (3d. Cir. 2026). Fair use requires courts to consider four factors:

(1) the purpose and character of the use, including whether such use is of a commercial nature or is for nonprofit educational purposes;

(2) the nature of the copyrighted work;

(3) the amount and substantiality of the portion used in relation to the copyrighted work as a whole; and

(4) the effect of the use upon the potential market for or value of the copyrighted work.217 USC § 107.

A determination under the first factor that a use “is of a commercial nature” in theory weighs against fair use, though it is not dispositive.3H.R. Rep. No. 94-1476 (1976) (the language “is an express recognition that, as under the present law, the commercial or non-profit character of an activity, while not conclusive with respect to fair use, can and should be weighed along with other factors in fair use decisions.”); Google LLC v. Oracle Am., Inc., 593 U.S. 1, 32 (2021). The caution against placing too much weight on this subfactor is driven in part because of the observation that “nearly all of the illustrative uses listed in the preamble paragraph of § 107, including news reporting, comment, criticism, teaching, scholarship, and research … ‘are generally conducted for profit in this country.'”4Campbell v. Acuff-Rose Music, Inc., 510 U.S. 569, 584 (1994).

The Third Circuit began its discussion of commerciality by describing the defendant’s business model.

UpCodes uses a “freemium” business model. Any user who makes an account on UpCodes’ website can view and copy building codes and incorporated standards for free. UpCodes also offers an optional paid subscription that provides access to bookmarking, annotation, automation, and artificial intelligence tools.

It concluded that the subfactor favors neither party.

Primarily, it agreed with the district court’s conclusion that UpCodes’ use was “largely noncommercial”, distinguishing the free access to the works provided by UpCodes from the use in an earlier Third Circuit decision, Video Pipeline, Inc. v. Buena Vista Home Entertainment, which was held to be commercial because the defendant charged a fee to access the copyrighted works at issue.5342 F.3d 191 (3d Cir. 2003). It acknowledged UpCodes is a for-profit company, but said its for-profit status “is moderated by the fact that users pay for access to UpCodes’ proprietary tools and technology, not for access to the Works.”

The court also considered the indirect commercial advantage UpCodes might reap from the copying, but said such advantage “carries less weight than evidence of direct profit,” and the manner and extend of the benefit here “remains unclear.”

The Third Circuit distorted the commerciality inquiry by treating free public access to copyrighted works as noncommercial or only weakly commercial.6ASTM‘s reliance on Video Pipeline‘s holding that “defendant’s use was commercial because it charged a fee” to draw a distinction is flawed because it denies the antecedent. See Khalil v. President, 164 F.4th 259, 283 (3d Cir. 2026) (J. Freeman dissenting) (This “fallacy extrapolates an ‘if-then’ statement to mean if the initial condition is reversed, then the outcome will necessarily be reversed. For example, consider the statement ‘if it is not cold outside, there is no snow.’ It does not follow that ‘if it is cold outside, there is snow.'”). In digital markets, free access is often part of a broader commercial strategy rather than an absence of commercial activity.

The freemium business model employed by UpCodes, which combines a free level of service with a premium, paid level of service, is very popular among digital services.7Yanying Shang, Junfeng Jiang, Yamin Zhang, Ruochen Zhang, Peiqing Liu, When does a freemium business model lead to high performance? A qualitative comparative analysis based on fuzzy sets,
Heliyon, Volume 10, Issue 3 (2024).
Ad-supported services and two-sided markets like social media services and search engines also commonly provide zero-price access to content as part of broader revenue generating models. The fact that nearly every successful online service employs some version of these models demonstrates the commercial benefits of zero-price offerings.

By conflating “free to the user” with “noncommercial,” the Third Circuit risks transforming fair use into a subsidy for particular digital business models. A platform that acquires audience attention, advertising revenue, market share, data, network effects, or other strategic advantages through the unlicensed use of copyrighted works is engaging in commercial activity even if there is no direct charge for access the works themselves. The relevant question should not be whether the user paid a price, but whether the defendant used copyrighted expression as an input into a broader profit-seeking enterprise. Indeed, USC Law Professor Jonathan Barnett argues in his 2024 book, The Big Steal, that tech platforms have deliberately sought to weaken copyright, including through expanding the scope of fair use, to reduce their costs of securing content, which they then monetize within their broader services.

ASTM‘s flawed commerciality analysis spills over into other parts of the fair use analysis. In its consideration of the purpose and character of the use, the Third Circuit rejects plaintiffs argument “that both parties share an identical purpose of making the Works available to the public on a subscription basis.” Says the court,

This characterization is not supported by the record. First, ASTM does not make the Works available to the public; it makes them available to those who pay for them. Second, UpCodes does not make the Works available on a subscription basis; it makes the Works available to all users, regardless of subscription status, and offers a paid subscription for advanced features.

This language is confusing and unhelpful. To be clear, I don’t believe the Third Circuit is saying that the fact that the defendant is providing free access to copyrighted works that the plaintiff charges for should weigh in favor of fair use. That would be illogical: any infringer can and does offer access to copyrighted works for free, or at least a lower price then the copyright owner charges. That is the very scenario copyright law exists to prevent. But it certainly doesn’t help future courts in viewing zero-price offerings as just another commercial strategy.

The ability of copyright owners to control pricing, including the decision to distribute a work for free, is one of the fundamental interests copyright protects. Offering another person’s work at a lower price, or at a price of zero, does not otherwise negate commerciality or indicate a public benefit.

References

References
1 No. 24-2965 (3d. Cir. 2026).
2 17 USC § 107.
3 H.R. Rep. No. 94-1476 (1976) (the language “is an express recognition that, as under the present law, the commercial or non-profit character of an activity, while not conclusive with respect to fair use, can and should be weighed along with other factors in fair use decisions.”); Google LLC v. Oracle Am., Inc., 593 U.S. 1, 32 (2021).
4 Campbell v. Acuff-Rose Music, Inc., 510 U.S. 569, 584 (1994).
5 342 F.3d 191 (3d Cir. 2003).
6 ASTM‘s reliance on Video Pipeline‘s holding that “defendant’s use was commercial because it charged a fee” to draw a distinction is flawed because it denies the antecedent. See Khalil v. President, 164 F.4th 259, 283 (3d Cir. 2026) (J. Freeman dissenting) (This “fallacy extrapolates an ‘if-then’ statement to mean if the initial condition is reversed, then the outcome will necessarily be reversed. For example, consider the statement ‘if it is not cold outside, there is no snow.’ It does not follow that ‘if it is cold outside, there is snow.'”).
7 Yanying Shang, Junfeng Jiang, Yamin Zhang, Ruochen Zhang, Peiqing Liu, When does a freemium business model lead to high performance? A qualitative comparative analysis based on fuzzy sets,
Heliyon, Volume 10, Issue 3 (2024).
By , June 19, 2026.

Publishers Sue WeLib for Copyright Infringement — The new lawsuit comes quickly on the heels of a default judgment against similar pirate site Anna’s Archive. According to the complaint, the illicit site boasts over 43 million books and 98 million papers, attracts over 80,000 active monthly users, and offers premium access starting at $7 month.

The Real-World Implications of the Supreme Court’s Cox Decision — Does the recent Supreme Court decision in Cox v. Sony upset the balance Congress struck between protecting authors and creators online and limiting exposure to liability for intermediaries? Keith Kupferschmid thinks it might, and writes here that “Congress should be watching carefully to ensure bad actors don’t exploit Cox.”

Reconstructing the Author, Not Re-Privatising the Text: The EU concept of work after Institutul G. Călinescu — A discussion of a recent decision from the Court of Justice of the European Union (CJEU) which considered a dispute over a critical edition of a public domain work, “involving collation, corrections, additions, comments and a critical apparatus.” The CJEU examined the issue through the lens of the EU’s originality threshold and, according to the author of this article, “consolidates the autonomous EU concept of work, applies the personality-based originality standard to derivative scholarly production, and sensibly permits the critical edition to be assessed as an integrated whole.”

Japan passes copyright reform giving performers and record companies royalties when recordings play in public, including overseas — The nation was one of the small number of OECD countries that did not extend protection to performers and labels for the public performance of sound recordings in public venues. With this legislative fix, Japaneses performers and labels will not only begin to receive royalties for such performances in their own country, but also begin to receive reciprocal payments from other countries where their works are publicly performed.

Journalistic Work Must Be Paid, but the Public’s Right to Information Will Still Be Guaranteed — Indonesia’s Press Council recently called attention to the sustainability of that country’s journalism and media ecosystem and proposed that any use of journalistic works for commercial purposes must be licensed and subject to royalty payments as part of the revision of Indonesia’s Copyright Law. As elsewhere around the world, the emergence of AI has increased pressure on the industry.

By , June 12, 2026.

Rare Full Court Rehearing Granted in Copyright Case Against Kat Von D’s Miles Davis Tattoo — It’s rare for a Circuit Court to rehear a case en banc. Even more rare: one of the leading copyright circuits to grant en banc rehearing to consider its long-standing, foundational precedent on the standard for copyright infringement. Copyright land will be paying close attention to this one.

The Importance of Copyright for African and Latin American Publishers — Report from an event organized by International Publishers Association during the 48th session of WIPO’s Standing Committee on Copyright and Related Rights, where representatives of publishers from African and Latin American countries met to discuss the challenges and opportunities for publishers. A common theme emerged: “while improving access to education and knowledge is an essential policy goal, weakening copyright protections in emerging publishing markets could undermine the very systems that sustain local authorship, educational production, and cultural diversity.”

AI company argues its use of scraped Westlaw legal data was transformative — A panel of Third Circuit judges heard oral arguments yesterday in Thomson Reuters v. ROSS Intelligence, the first case to reach an appellate court on the issue of fair use of copyrighted works to train an artificial intelligence model. Courthouse News reports on the arguments, which suggested some skepticism from the judges toward the AI developer’s arguments.

Generative AI and Copyright: The Significance of GEMA v. OpenAI (Munich, 2025) — Legal analysis of last November’s decision from the Regional Court of Munich in Germany, one of the earliest and most significant rulings on the use of copyrighted works to train generative AI models in continental Europe. The court there found that AI training and outputs may infringe copyright where song lyrics from identifiable works are reproduced in model outputs.

By , June 08, 2026.

The Supreme Court’s solo foray into copyright this term, Cox v. Sony, has shaken up the landscape of secondary liability.

In its wake, a growing chorus of voices have noted that direct liability under copyright law needs a fresh look, particularly the doctrine of volitional conduct. Shortly after the decision was published, law professor Guy Rub wrote, “If contributory liability becomes harder to prove, plaintiffs might lean more heavily on direct liability. That means revisiting doctrines that have traditionally limited it, especially volitional conduct.” Similarly, and more recently, attorney Aaron Moss wrote, “But as secondary liability narrows in Cox‘s wake, the doctrine that may shape the next phase of AI litigation—the fight over its outputs—lives on the direct infringement side of the line. It’s volitional conduct, a judge-made rule that decides who’s responsible when an automated system makes an infringing copy.”

They have a point. At best, volitional conduct is an unnecessary synonym for proximate causation, and an imprecise application of the doctrine.1Robert C. Denicola, Volition and Copyright Infringement, 37 Cardozo Law Rev. 1259, 1268-70 (2016). At worst, it stands for an irrational “who pressed the button test.”2See Cartoon Network LP v. CSC Holdings, 536 F.3d 121, 131 (2d Cir. 2008) (“the person who actually presses the button to make the recording [] supplies the necessary element of volition, not the person who manuactures, maintains, or, if distinct from the operator, owns the machine”); see also Fox Broad. Co. v. Dish Network, 747 F.3d 1060, 1067 (9th Cir. 2014); CoStar Grp., Inc. v. LoopNet, Inc., 373 F.3d 544, 551 (4th Cir. 2004); Disney Enters. v. Hofile Corp., 798 F. Supp. 2d 1303, 1308 (S.D. Fla. 2011). Such a test does not align with general tort principles, nor is it consistent with the Copyright Act or its goals. And as Moss points out, Cox comes at a time when it is especially vital to get these issues right, as AI ushers in an era where systems are being developed that can engage in increasingly sophisticated autonomous acts at the press of a button.

Where did the volitional conduct doctrine come from? The Copyright Act provides that “Anyone who violates any of the exclusive rights of the copyright owner … is an infringer of the copyright.”317 USC § 501(a). In an early decision involving a copyright infringement claim against an ISP, the Northern District of California said, “Although copyright is a strict liability statute, there should still be some element of volition or causation which is lacking where a defendant’s system is merely used to create a copy by a third party.” It was wary of “a theory of infringement that would hold the entire Internet liable for activities that cannot reasonably be deterred.” But it noted that even if an ISP was free from direct liability under its theory, it may still be liable under a theory of secondary liability.

Appellate courts embraced the Netcom decision and expanded it in several unhelpful ways.

In CoStar Grp. v. LoopNet, the Fourth Circuit read Netcom as an almost categorical rule that “the automatic copying, storage, and transmission of copyrighted materials, when instigated by others” does not create direct liability under the Copyright Act.4373 F.3d 544, 555 (4th Cir. 2004). And it went one step further by holding that the additional act of the ISP in this case of screening user-uploaded photographs to a commercial real estate listings website it operated does not change its conclusion, drawing a dissent that said, “the majority expands the non-volitional defense well beyond Netcom and subsequent holdings, and gives direct infringers in the commercial cybersphere far greater protections than they would be accorded in print and other more traditional media.”

The Second Circuit made CoStar’s expansion look modest in comparison. Cartoon Network v. CSC Holdings rejected the lower court’s conclusion that Netcom was “premised on the unique attributes of the Internet,” and held that a cable service was not directly liable for copying live television programming to allow for later viewing.5536 F.3d 121 (2d Cir. 2008). The volitional conduct doctrine was now available to service providers who designed, implemented, and operated their own enterprise services—services which provide access to copyrighted content that users wouldn’t otherwise have and derive economic value from that content. This was a sharp departure from the passive, conduit ISP at issue in Netcom and the policy concerns that drove that decision.

ABC v. Aereo presented the Supreme Court with the first natural opportunity to consider the volitional conduct doctrine.6573 U.S. 431 (2014). Somewhat surprisingly, the majority did not rely on the Netcom framework nor even mention volition. But a dissenting opinion did—Justice Scalia described the volitional-conduct requirement as a given, calling it “firmly grounded in the Act’s text” and “fully consistent” with precedent.7573 U.S. at 453-455 (J. Scalia dissent).

What’s more surprising is that later courts seem to have followed the Aereo dissent more than the majority. Several circuit courts rejected arguments Aereo pressed delete on the volitional conduct doctrine, characterizing the majority’s silence as tacit acquiescence.8Perfect10, Inc. v. Giganews, Inc., 847 F.3d 657 (9th Cir. 2017); BWP Media United States v. T & S Software Assocs., 852 F.3d 436 (5th Cir. 2017).

Despite the (sometimes reflexive) acceptance of the doctrine in lower courts, it has attracted just as much, if not more, doctrinal criticism.9One noteworthy judicial debate arose in the Second Circuit’s BWP Media v. Polyvore decision, which consisted of a brief per curiam statement indicating its ruling and three separate concurring opinions on the volitional conduct requirement. In the previously mentioned article from Prof. Rub, he says it “has always been somewhat fragile: thin textual grounding, no clear Supreme Court endorsement, and uneven (and somewhat unclear) lower court application.”

Among its most fundamental flaws, it reduces the scope of liability to a single inquiry: who was the final party to take an action in the process of copying. It insists that in factual scenarios arising in the digital and online environment there is a single, unique causal actor. It doesn’t allow for joint or multiple causal actors. It ignores all the affirmative steps involved in designing, implementing, and operating an automated system that makes the copying possible in the first place and allows capture of commercial value from that copying.

More importantly, the volitional conduct doctrine arose within a legal framework in which secondary liability served as a backstop. For example, Justice Scalia wrote in his Aereo dissent, “The distinction between direct and secondary liability would collapse if there were not a clear rule for determining whether the defendant committed the infringing act. The volitional-conduct requirement supplies that rule; its purpose is not to excuse defendants from accountability, but to channel the claims against them into the correct analytical track.”10573 U.S. at 455 (J. Scalia dissent). Because volitional conduct and secondary liability are intertwined, to the extent Cox has redefined the standard for secondary liability, courts should accordingly reconsider the standard for direct liability.

At a minimum, courts should reject the “who pressed the button” version of volitional conduct. They can look instead to well-established principles of proximate causation11Note that the term “proximate causation” has drawn disfavor, see, e.g., Restatement (Third) of Torts, § 29 cmt. b (2010). to better allocate direct liability on actors who are factual causes of copying, including actors who design, implement, and operate automated systems. Actors should not be able to evade direct liability simply because they are able to automate their service or design it so it requires user initiation, and copyright owners should not be precluded from seeking relief from infringement against a least-cost avoider.

This will ensure the exclusive rights remain meaningful.

It does not, however, mean the floodgates of direct liability would open. Courts could, for example, continue to decide that ISPs like Netcom, doing no more than engaging in the automated, temporary, indiscriminate copying of all data that moves through their systems as part of a larger, interconnected network, are not directly liable for any infringement initiated by their users. Additionally, the DMCA would still operate as a shield against uncertainty over the scope of liability since the safe harbors apply to both direct and secondary liability claims.

References

References
1 Robert C. Denicola, Volition and Copyright Infringement, 37 Cardozo Law Rev. 1259, 1268-70 (2016).
2 See Cartoon Network LP v. CSC Holdings, 536 F.3d 121, 131 (2d Cir. 2008) (“the person who actually presses the button to make the recording [] supplies the necessary element of volition, not the person who manuactures, maintains, or, if distinct from the operator, owns the machine”); see also Fox Broad. Co. v. Dish Network, 747 F.3d 1060, 1067 (9th Cir. 2014); CoStar Grp., Inc. v. LoopNet, Inc., 373 F.3d 544, 551 (4th Cir. 2004); Disney Enters. v. Hofile Corp., 798 F. Supp. 2d 1303, 1308 (S.D. Fla. 2011).
3 17 USC § 501(a).
4 373 F.3d 544, 555 (4th Cir. 2004).
5 536 F.3d 121 (2d Cir. 2008).
6 573 U.S. 431 (2014).
7 573 U.S. at 453-455 (J. Scalia dissent).
8 Perfect10, Inc. v. Giganews, Inc., 847 F.3d 657 (9th Cir. 2017); BWP Media United States v. T & S Software Assocs., 852 F.3d 436 (5th Cir. 2017).
9 One noteworthy judicial debate arose in the Second Circuit’s BWP Media v. Polyvore decision, which consisted of a brief per curiam statement indicating its ruling and three separate concurring opinions on the volitional conduct requirement.
10 573 U.S. at 455 (J. Scalia dissent).
11 Note that the term “proximate causation” has drawn disfavor, see, e.g., Restatement (Third) of Torts, § 29 cmt. b (2010).
By , June 05, 2026.

News publishers take fight over copyright of embedded content to Fifth Circuit — The Fifth Circuit heard oral arguments this week in a dispute between a local news publisher and an online news aggregator over alleged public display of news articles on the aggregator’s app. The key question for the court is whether to follow the plain text of the Copyright Act or adopt the Ninth Circuit’s “server test.”

Cox and Effect: Why Volitional Conduct Is AI Copyright’s Next BattlegroundCopyright Lately’s Aaron Moss considers whether we will see renewed attention on the “volitional conduct” doctrine in the wake of the Supreme Court’s decision in Cox v. Sony. Moss notes it will likely emerge as a key issue when courts confront the allocation of liability over the generation of infringing outputs by generative AI models.

Tanzania Pushes for Robust African Copyright Framework at CISAC Summit in Paris — Report from the CISAC Regional Committee for Africa meeting about the vigorous efforts by the delegation from the Copyright Society of Tanzania to strengthen protections for African artists and creatives in the face of artificial intelligence. Participants specifically called for vigorous ownership verification systems, combatting AI data scraping, modernizing royalty distribution, and cross-border institutional cooperation.

Creative and cultural sector gets further copyright support — The government of New Zealand announced a proposed set of changes to its copyright law which include updating exceptions for museums, libraries, galleries, and archives; offshore piracy website blocking; and a twenty year term extension. The country’s Commerce and Consumer Affairs Minister also announced a possible copyright framework for generative AI in New Zealand that he will report in March 2027.

Top Noteworthy Copyright Stories from May 2026 — The Copyright Alliance runs down key developments from a busy month, with updates from the US Copyright Office, the courts, Congress, and in the international space.

By , June 01, 2026.

The Fifth Amendment of the US Constitution prohibits the federal government from taking private property for public use without just compensation, embracing a principle at least as old as Cicero, who wrote in his 44 BCE book On Duties, “he who will administer a commonwealth must especially see to it that each person keeps what is his and that no public confiscation of private goods occurs.”1Marcus Tullius Cicero, On Duties, pg. 118 (Cornell Univ. Press 2016).

But this is not an article about the Takings Clause. It instead uses a recent lawsuit involving the Takings Clause as a springboard to consider a threshold point, which is this: a government taking of a digital copy of a copyrighted work does not convey any of the exclusive rights under 17 USC § 106 to the government. This is such a critical point that, though obvious to anyone with a working knowledge of copyright law, bears stating upfront so as to be clear about the proper scope of the takings inquiry.

Earlier this year, a federal district court in Valancourt v. Perlmutter entered final judgment in longstanding litigation brought by a small independent publisher to challenge the mandatory deposit provisions in 17 USC § 407 under the Takings Clause and Free Speech Clause.2Valancourt Books, LLC v. Perlmutter, 2026 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 63414. The judgment came following remand from a 2023 DC Circuit decision that held “that the mandatory deposit requirement, as applied by the Copyright Office against Valancourt, was an uncompensated taking in violation of the Fifth Amendment.”3Valancourt Books, LLC v. Garland, 82 F.4th 1222, 1226 (DC Cir. 2023).

The mandatory deposit provisions of the Copyright Act state that “the owner of copyright or of the exclusive right of publication in a work published in the United States shall deposit, within three months after the date of such publication . . . two complete copies of the best edition” of the work.417 USC § 407(a)(1). These copies “shall be deposited in the Copyright Office for the use or disposition of the Library of Congress.”517 USC § 407(b). To enforce the mandatory deposit requirement, the Copyright Office may make a written demand for the required deposit. A copyright owner who fails to make the “required deposit” within three months of a demand becomes liable for a “fine of not more than $250 for each work,” with an additional $2,500 fine for willful or repeated failure or refusal to comply with demands.617 USC § 407(d). (Note that copies of works submitted as part of an application for copyright registration under 17 USC § 408 satisfy the mandatory deposit requirement, but the mandatory deposit requirement applies even if a copyright owner does not register their work.)

In June 2018, the U.S. Copyright Office sent an email to Valancourt demanding the publisher deposit one physical copy of each of 341 works with the Library of Congress pursuant to the mandatory deposit provisions, subsequently revising the number of requested books to 240 in an updated demand letter sent in August 2018. In its final judgment, the district court issued a declaration that the August 2018 demand letter violates the Takings Clause and enjoined the Copyright Office from enforcing that demand.

This final decision, addressing only the demand for physical copies, leaves a number of issues open, among them, whether a demand for deposit of an electronic copy without compensation would violate the Takings Clause.7The decision also leaves open the question of whether 17 USC § 407 violates the First Amendment. The DC Circuit declined to reach the First Amendment claim after holding the demand violated the Takings Clause, as it sought the same relief. 82 F.4th at 1226. The DC Circuit explained that it wouldn’t proceed with that question because “neither party appears to ask us to reach the question, and because the presentation of the case does not require us to do so.” It deferred to the district court’s observation that the “analysis might raise unique questions,” such as “how the principles of the Takings Clause ‘developed in the context of ‘real property’ . . . would apply to a requirement that can be fulfilled by the transmission of digital copies.’”8Neither of the two courts acknowledged Supreme Court precedent applying the Takings Clause to intangible property; see, e.g., Ruckelshaus v Monsanto, 467 US 986, 1003 (1984) (“the Court has found other kinds of intangible interests to be property for purposes of the Fifth Amendment’s Taking Clause… That intangible property rights protected by state law are deserving of the protection of the Taking Clause has long been implicit in the thinking of this Court.”

But regardless of whether a government demand for deposit of an electronic copy requires compensating the copyright owner, there is a risk that a court or the government will conflate possession of the copy with transfer of the copyright. This is a bedrock principle of copyright law. Section 202 of the Copyright Act states, “Ownership of a copyright, or of any of the exclusive rights under a copyright, is distinct from ownership of any material object in which the work is embodied. Transfer of ownership of any material object, including the copy or phonorecord in which the work is first fixed, does not of itself convey any rights in the copyrighted work embodied in the object.”

If the government acquires a digital copy under the mandatory deposit provision, it cannot make additional copies, public performances, or public displays of the work, or exercise any of the other exclusive rights of the copyright owner. The statute provides only that such copies acquired through deposit are “for the use or disposition of the Library of Congress.”917 USC § 407(b). This language does not express any departure from Section 202 or the rest of the Copyright Act and so must be read to limit the Library to using the copy only in ways that do not implicate the copyright owner’s rights. To put it another way, no one would argue that when the Library of Congress acquires a physical book that it is permitted to reproduce additional copies of that book under the “use or disposition” language.

The use and disposition of digital copies is rather limited. Many uses of digital copies may in fact implicate the exclusive right of reproduction, a point the U.S. Copyright Office has long noted. For example, in its 2001 DMCA Section 104 Report, the Office wrote, “All of the familiar activities that one performs on a computer — e.g., execution of a computer program, retrieval and display of information, browsing the World-Wide Web — necessarily entail making reproductions in RAM,” and such reproductions “are generally ‘fixed’ and thus constitute ‘copies’ that are within the scope of the copyright owner’s reproduction right.”10Section 104 Report at 107-110. The Office cited to that discussion in a 2016 report on Software-Enabled Consumer Products, adding, “It appears that the RAM copy doctrine is today firmly established as a matter of case law.”11Software-Enabled Consumer Products Report at 19 n.101.

There is also an open question as to what authority the Library of Congress would have to display to members of the public digital copies in its collections of works that are still protected by copyright law. A copyright owner has the exclusive right to display a work publicly.1217 USC § 106(5). The Act defines “display” to mean “show[ing] a copy of [the work], either directly or by means of a film, slide, television image, or any other device or process,” and it defines displaying a work “publicly” to mean, in relevant part, to display it at “a place open to the public …or… to transmit or otherwise communicate a … display of the work to a place [open to the public].”1317 USC § 101. Section 109(c) creates an exception that permits the owner of a particular, lawfully made copy to display that copy publicly “either directly or by the projection of no more than one image at a time, to viewers present at the place where the copy is located.” The plain text of these provisions would appear to permit the public display of a digital copy stored locally, i.e., on or near the device on which it is being viewed. The text would not appear to permit the public display when the digital copy is stored off site or in the cloud, since viewers would not be present at the same place where the copy is located. (Additionally, Section 109(c) is only an exception to the public display right and would not apply to any reproductions made as a result of any digital transmissions.)

Any uses of the work that implicate the copyright owner’s exclusive rights would require action by Congress to be permitted. Congress knows how to create exceptions for such a purpose when it wants to. For example, rather than relying solely on copyright owners of programs transmitted to the public to deposit copies of such works in the Library of Congress, Congress has authorized the Library itself “to make a fixation of a transmission program directly from a transmission to the public, and to reproduce one copy or phonorecord from such fixation for archival purposes.”1417 USC § 407(e)(1). The existence of this exception provides further support for the points made above regarding the use and disposition of digital copies acquired by the Library.

The public undoubtedly benefits from the collections of the Library of Congress, which encompass an unparalleled collection of historically and culturally significant works that are the product of the creativity, talents, and knowledge of countless individuals. But the Fifth Amendment of the Constitution limits the government’s ability to compel private individuals to subsidize public benefits by requiring compensation for any such takings. When the subject of a governmental taking is electronic copies of copyrighted works, then the analysis must begin with the understanding that the government’s acquisition of the copy does not also convey the exclusive rights to the work embodied in the copy.

References

References
1 Marcus Tullius Cicero, On Duties, pg. 118 (Cornell Univ. Press 2016).
2 Valancourt Books, LLC v. Perlmutter, 2026 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 63414.
3 Valancourt Books, LLC v. Garland, 82 F.4th 1222, 1226 (DC Cir. 2023).
4 17 USC § 407(a)(1).
5 17 USC § 407(b).
6 17 USC § 407(d).
7 The decision also leaves open the question of whether 17 USC § 407 violates the First Amendment. The DC Circuit declined to reach the First Amendment claim after holding the demand violated the Takings Clause, as it sought the same relief. 82 F.4th at 1226.
8 Neither of the two courts acknowledged Supreme Court precedent applying the Takings Clause to intangible property; see, e.g., Ruckelshaus v Monsanto, 467 US 986, 1003 (1984) (“the Court has found other kinds of intangible interests to be property for purposes of the Fifth Amendment’s Taking Clause… That intangible property rights protected by state law are deserving of the protection of the Taking Clause has long been implicit in the thinking of this Court.”
9 17 USC § 407(b).
10 Section 104 Report at 107-110.
11 Software-Enabled Consumer Products Report at 19 n.101.
12 17 USC § 106(5).
13 17 USC § 101.
14 17 USC § 407(e)(1).
By , May 29, 2026.

CNN Sues AI Firm Perplexity, Alleging It Engaged in ‘Massive Copyright Infringement’ — “In the 54-page federal complaint, CNN points to Perplexity’s former ads claiming that it helps users skip the ‘extra steps and clicks’ they’d normally take to access news content. The network said it spoke to Perplexity about a deal last year but could not agree on terms, including restrictions on how the company’s chatbot uses CNN’s content.”

VerticalScope sues OpenAI, claims AI giant infringed copyright by scraping content to train GPT models — “Filed in the Ontario Superior Court of Justice on Tuesday, VerticalScope’s statement of claim alleges that OpenAI’s misuse of its content unjustly enriched the San Francisco-based AI giant. The Canadian company is seeking damages and a permanent injunction to stop OpenAI from scraping its content.”

China’s MiniMax loses bid to end Disney copyright lawsuit over AI system — “MiniMax argued that the California court could not hear the case because the company does all of its business in China. But Blumenfeld said there was evidence ​that the company was ​offering the Hailuo ⁠app in the United States.”

X is Cracking Down on Accounts That Rip Off the Work of Photographers and Other Creators — “In an announcement, X’s head of product Nikita Bier says his team has ‘identified a number of large accounts that have been programatically reuploading content.’ Bier says these accounts will circumvent crediting the original author.”

Pass Go, Collect Copyright: The Legal Side of Board Games — “Board games are fun, engaging and a treasure trove of IP protection. Board games are a great example of how copyright draws that line: the mechanics are free for anyone to use, but the creative choices: the artwork, the wording, the overall look and feel, are where protection sits.”

By , May 15, 2026.

C in a Circle: Why I Started this Blog Series — From Steven Tepp. “There are already plenty of blogs and public discussion about current events in copyright. My focus is a future-looking vision of what the Copyright Office and the American copyright system can and should be. That may from time to time include addressing current events, but that is not my focus. I will be writing about the big-picture questions of the Copyright Act, how individual issues and cases illustrate strengths and/or shortcomings, and the operation of the Copyright Office as the agency that administers the law and in particular the registration system.”

Authors, publishers near final approval of $1.5 billion Anthropic copyright settlement — “In addition to monetary relief for the plaintiffs, Anthropic will also be required to destroy the original files of the works they downloaded from the pirated book datasets within 30 days of the final judgment and certify that Library Genesis and Pirate Library Mirror datasets with pirated material were used in training any of the company’s commercially released large language models.”

Copyright isn’t dead in the age of AI, it’s key to growing UK creative industries — “In the 2010s, when I served as minister for culture and digital economy in David Cameron’s government, we heard the same chorus (though back then it was about illegal file-sharing): copyright is outdated and infringement is the price of modernity. It wasn’t true then and it isn’t true now. In reality, copyright is the market mechanism that underpins creativity and turns it into a precious asset: something you can buy, sell, license, finance and build a business around. If we want Britain to be both an AI superpower and a creative powerhouse, the answer is to recognise the market making power of copyright and support commercial licensing at speed and at scale.”

ECJ ruling on ancillary copyright: Meta must pay for press content in Italy — “A key point of the ruling concerns the power imbalance between platforms and publishers. The ECJ explains that publishers are in a weak negotiating position because often only the platforms have the data to quantify the economic value of a use. Therefore, it is lawful to oblige providers like Meta to disclose the information necessary for calculating remuneration. Furthermore, operators may not simply restrict the visibility of news content during ongoing negotiations to exert pressure or obscure the value of the content.”

Access to sites with pirated content blocked under copyright law revision — “A revision to the Copyright Act that was passed in January went into effect on Monday, allowing the Ministry of Culture, Sports and Tourism to order network operators to block user access to websites that repeatedly commit copyright offenses, namely piracy. Prior to revision, the consequences of copyright offenses were determined by the Korea Communications Commission’s review committee.”

By , May 08, 2026.

Publishers and Authors Sue Meta, Alleging ‘Massive’ Copyright Infringement Behind Its Llama AI Service — “‘Meta’s copying of these literary works was neither incidental nor accidental,’ the publishers’ suit claims. ‘It was a calculated decision driven by the need to appropriate the expressive value of copyrighted written works to produce an AI system capable of generating outputs that directly compete with literary works written by human authors.'”

NVIDIA’s Shadow Library Scripts ‘Have No Other Purpose’ Than Infringement, Judge Rules — “This appears to be the first AI training case to apply the new Cox standard, and the result didn’t go the way NVIDIA hoped. The scripts it offered satisfied both the new ‘inducement’ and ‘tailored to infringement’ standards required for a contributory infringement finding.”

ASTM v. UpCodes is a Troubling Misapplication of Warhol’s Transformative Use Clarifications — “The bottom line is that both ASTM and UpCodes published the works for the purpose of helping the public understand the codes and technical standards that impact and govern safety. To say that UpCodes’ purpose is transformative simply because they take the works and post them where the public can access them for free is antithetical to the foundations of copyright law. If that logic were applied widely, it would excuse almost any type of piracy so long as the infringer claimed it was in service of some kind of public interest.”

Annie Leibovitz copyright infringement lawsuit revived in case involving Star Wars movie photos — “The appeals court held that Leibovitz’s retention of certain rights does not automatically foreclose the representative from asserting status as an exclusive licensee, namely because rights can be divisible and subdivisible under Section 106 of the Copyright Act.”

CCC adds AI reuse rights to higher education copyright licence — “CCC said the expanded licence is intended to help institutions address what it describes as a ‘growing permissions gap’ by enabling the authorised internal reuse of lawfully acquired copyrighted content within AI systems for purposes including summarisation, chatbot development, prompting, and research support.”

By , May 01, 2026.

Devious New AI Tool “Clones” Software So That the Original Creator Doesn’t Hold a Copyright Over the New Version — “The advent of generative AI continues to undermine the very concept of copyright, from entire books shamelessly ripping off authors to tasteless AI slop depicting beloved characters going viral on social media. The sin is foundational: all today’s popular AI tools were built by pillaging copyrighted material without permission. Even software isn’t safe.”

Books, language and knowledge ownership: Why publishing and copyright matter in South Africa — “In this rapidly evolving digital and AI-driven era, the continuing significance of books becomes even more pronounced. While artificial intelligence accelerates the production, dissemination, and consumption of information, it often privileges speed, volume, and efficiency over depth and reflection. Books, by contrast, invite sustained engagement, critical thinking, and ethical deliberation.”

Japan ruling party seeks AI penalties over deepfakes, piracy — “Japan’s ruling Liberal Democratic Party is urging the government to consider adding penalties to the country’s artificial intelligence law, as concerns grow over deepfakes and copyright infringement tied to generative AI.”

Netflix Prevails in ‘Tiger King’ Copyright Case, a Win for ‘Fair Use’ in Documentaries — “Two years later, after additional briefing and argument, the court decided it was wrong. In so doing, the court relied on cases from the 9th and 4th circuits that have allowed documentary makers to use copyrighted clips without permission to make some broader point. ‘Tiger King’s use of the Funeral Video clips is classic documentary-style borrowing,’ Holmes concluded.”

The Best (IP) Offense is a Good (IP) Defense — “Effective IP protection requires laws that are kept up to date to address how IP crimes have evolved over time. To truly protect American sports fans, teams, and rightsholders in the era of live piracy, the U.S. Congress should create a judicially supervised website blocking tool similar to those proven to work in over 55 nations around the world, including many of our strongest allies. Judicial site blocking allows a court to order US intermediaries (most often internet providers) to block foreign piracy sites from reaching and victimizing American viewers”