Pirate site Anna’s Archive hit with $322M default judgment over music scraping — but will Spotify and record labels ever see the money? — “The judge’s ruling also requires internet service providers including Cloudflare to disable access to Anna’s Archive’s domain names and prevent websites that host the infringing content or facilitate the distribution of this content.”
CJEU delivers pastiche-style judgment on … pastiche — “With its second referral in the long-running dispute in Pelham, Germany’s Federal Court of Justice (BGH) asked the CJEU to tackle the notion of pastiche, this being a defence that – just a few years ago – very few people would have noticed let alone considered invoking. Things have changed: pending the second Pelham referral, some considered (and recommended considering) pastiche a potentially very broad defence, which would cover nearly every ‘creative’ re-use of copyright works and other protected subject-matter. Unsurprisingly, this is not the case.”
EU copyright law roundup – first trimester of 2026 — “Welcome to our first roundup for 2026. In the first trimester of this year, several important developments have taken place in the EU copyright law arena. As our regular audience will know, in this series we have been reporting on CJEU judgments, Advocate General (AG) Opinions (if any) and significant policy developments.”
MPA’s Rivkin: “Protecting copyright an economic necessity” — “Motion Picture Association Chairman and CEO Charles Rivkin has reaffirmed the body’s commitment to protecting copyright in the age of AI. Delivering his annual State of the Industry address at CinemaCon in Las Vegas, Rivkin noted that every time there had been a new advancement, the industry had persisted.”
Anthropic Code Crisis Creates Copyright Contradiction — “Anthropic has sought to minimize the impact of the unintended disclosure, and turned to US copyright law to do so—issuing a takedown notice under the Digital Millennium Copyright Act (DMCA) to GitHub in a bid to have its leaked code taken offline, or at least to restrict its circulation somewhat. The company’s critics, though, have been swift to spot the irony: Anthropic, like most of the broader AI industry, has been embroiled in copyright lawsuits for several years—which have seen the company’s lawyers make some expansive claims about why copyright does not prevent the training or development of AI models.”