Courts can’t stick their heads in the sand to an obvious way that a new technology might severely harm the incentive to create, just because the issue has not come up before. Indeed, it seems likely that market dilution will often cause plaintiffs to decisively win the fourth factor—and thus win the fair use question […]| The Illusion of More
In AWF v. Goldsmith, the Supreme Court reins in the "transformativeness" blob, keeping it from swallowing the derivative works right.| The Illusion of More
The first AI training case has been decided in the US in favor of the copyright holder.| The Scholarly Kitchen