For Creators

Your Work Was Used to Train AI.
Here's What You Can Do.

Billions of images, articles, books, and songs were scraped from the internet to train AI models — without asking the people who made them. If that includes your work, you have real options.

Understand Your Rights

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AI Training Is Not Always Fair Use

The U.S. Copyright Office confirmed that using copyrighted works to train AI that generates competing content goes beyond fair use.

Read the analysis →
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Creators Are Winning

Anthropic offered $1.5 billion to settle with 500,000 authors. Getty Images is suing Stability AI. The tide is turning.

See all cases →
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AI-Assisted Work CAN Be Copyrighted

If you use AI as a tool but add substantial human creativity, your work may still qualify for copyright protection.

Learn how →
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Laws Vary by Country

The US requires human authorship. The UK has different rules. Japan is AI-friendly. Know what applies to you.

Compare laws →

Creators Fighting Back

These cases are shaping the future of AI copyright law.

Settlement $1.5 Billion

Authors v. Anthropic

500,000 authors sued over books used to train Claude. Largest copyright settlement offer in history.

Full case details →
Active 12 million images

Getty Images v. Stability AI

Getty alleges Stable Diffusion was trained on 12 million copyrighted photos without license.

Full case details →
Active Billions at stake

New York Times v. OpenAI

NYT alleges millions of articles used to train ChatGPT, creating a competing product.

Full case details →
View all cases →

Get Updates When Creators Win

Weekly digest of rulings, settlements, and new protections for creators.