Trump administration's "AI Action Plan" may redefine fair use - OpenAI is counting on it

Skye Jacobs

Posts: 580   +13
Staff
The big picture: With at least one court ruling that AI training does not qualify as fair use, OpenAI is looking to the Trump administration's upcoming AI Action Plan to help resolve ongoing copyright disputes. Due out in July, the plan could potentially classify AI training as fair use, granting AI companies unrestricted access to critical training data. OpenAI argues that such a move is essential for the US to maintain its competitive edge in the AI race against China.

US courts are currently grappling with whether AI training qualifies as fair use, with rights holders arguing that AI models pose a market threat by potentially replacing them and diluting creative output. OpenAI and several other AI companies are embroiled in multiple lawsuits, contending that AI transforms copyrighted works rather than serving as a direct substitute. However, a landmark ruling has already favored rights holders, with a judge determining that AI training does not constitute fair use, citing its direct threat to Thomson Reuters' legal research firm, Westlaw.

The debate is also unfolding internationally, as countries seek to balance copyright protections with the growing demand for AI training.

OpenAI asserts that its models do not replicate copyrighted works for public consumption but instead extract patterns and insights to generate new and distinct content. The company argues that this approach aligns with the fundamental principles of copyright and fair use doctrine.

"OpenAI's models are trained to not replicate works for consumption by the public. Instead, they learn from the works and extract patterns, linguistic structures, and contextual insights," OpenAI explained. "This means our AI model training aligns with the core objectives of copyright and the fair use doctrine, using existing works to create something wholly new and different without eroding the commercial value of those existing works."

During a public comment period, OpenAI urged the US to shift its copyright strategy to promote the AI industry's "freedom to learn," warning that restricting American companies from accessing copyrighted data – while Chinese firms face no such limitations – could cost the US its AI leadership.

"The federal government can both secure Americans' freedom to learn from AI and avoid forfeiting our AI lead to the PRC by preserving American AI models' ability to learn from copyrighted material," OpenAI stated.

The company also called for legal protections for AI firms, citing the strain caused by a patchwork of state regulations. As of 2025, legislative tracker MultiState has flagged 832 AI-related laws. OpenAI warned that mirroring the European Union's strict regulatory approach could stifle innovation, impose burdensome compliance costs, and weaken economic competitiveness and national security.

Instead, it proposed a federal law that preempts state regulations, offering a voluntary public-private partnership where AI companies share industry knowledge in exchange for liability protections.

OpenAI further urged the US to lead global discussions on copyright and AI to prevent less innovative countries from imposing restrictive legal frameworks on American firms. This includes assessing data availability and ensuring US companies retain access to critical training inputs. With China's rapid AI advancements, such as the open-sourced DeepSeek model, OpenAI cautioned that the US lead in AI is narrowing and requires urgent action to maintain.

Additionally, the company stressed that national security depends on unfettered access to AI training data and called for a balanced approach that fosters innovation while safeguarding intellectual property rights. As the US Copyright Office prepares to release further guidance on AI training in its upcoming report, the stakes are high for both AI firms and copyright holders.

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This shouldn't even go to court, it's a clear violation of copyright. Period.
It's true but I am hearing their argument is that deepseak is somehow exempt from the same standards and want to be on the same be competetive plainfield at all cost. If other foreign models are using copyright material to train model, they should be banned from western markets to even the Plainfield imo!
They want to cut corners for maximum growth. Either they pay copyright royalties or they leave it alone. I wonder if their will be an ai that can scan for copyright fragments to identify such practices? Unfortunately you would probably have to feed that model willingly with copyright material too.
 
Weather or not we let our own AIs train on copyrighted data, you can be sure China will.
Then U.S. companies need to do more than just hoard massive amounts of data. They need to invest in high-quality, curated data legally (pay the price and stop complaining) and INNOVATE!

In my opinion, this whole idea of complaining to the Trump administration is just nonsense. I thought America was all about capitalism, where competition brings out the best, and the best wins. If some countries have an edge, that’s part of the game. Throwing people’s intellectual property and legal rights under the bus so a few tech bros can try to keep up is utter nonsense. See my previous comment for what I hear them saying.
 
This shouldn't even go to court, it's a clear violation of copyright. Period.
The only argument that should be considered is whether Chinese will violate these laws.
They will. Then their AI can get far ahead. Then they can make vastly better AI weapons.
Then they can do whatever they like. That is what the best minds should work on, protecting information from unauthorized use by AI companies. Making laws shared with other Western nations that ensure people do not lose everything they worked so hard to create to multibillion AI corporations.
 
Then U.S. companies need to do more than just hoard massive amounts of data. They need to invest in high-quality, curated data legally (pay the price and stop complaining) and INNOVATE!

In my opinion, this whole idea of complaining to the Trump administration is just nonsense. I thought America was all about capitalism, where competition brings out the best, and the best wins. If some countries have an edge, that’s part of the game. Throwing people’s intellectual property and legal rights under the bus so a few tech bros can try to keep up is utter nonsense. See my previous comment for what I hear them saying.
I can agree with you in principle but in practice, it's not realistic to think we can secure that much data from being accessible to China. That ship has sailed long ago.
 
"...such a move is essential for the US to maintain its competitive edge in the AI race against China."

Look, with this administration, that's not going to happen. Our researchers and corporations won't be able to afford the computing power, and they won't be able to innovate around that without research funds that are drying up. With everything changing daily, they won't be able to plan or budget.

International talks about AI or Copyright Protections are non-starters with an administration that isn't at all interested in adhering to existing international agreements. Why would anyone assume that they'll be negotiating in good faith? It's much safer and more realistic to assume they won't.

All tech and scientific research in this country is screwed for at least a generation. Get used to it.
 
"OpenAI urged the US to shift its copyright strategy to promote the AI industry's "freedom to learn,"..."

So using this same logic, if they go ahead and grant AI access to learning content for free, they should also make learning content free for all places of education - or does a tech company's ability to produce a saleable product trump a person's access to learn.
 
Everyone whining their work is copyrighted and shouldn't be used for training used the copyrighted work of many other people to train themselves.
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It would be the pinnacle of idiocy and irresponsibility to allow legal bloat to stop progress.
The US still has a clear advantage, but if we're stupid enough to pause and meditate on abstract issues while everyone else advances unrestricted, it will not last long.

Absolutely every piece of literature, music and everything is based on previous work. So far this has always been ignored (and rightly so) unless there's a blatant resemblance to a concrete existing piece. I don't see why this should change.

The issue has nothing to do with OpenAI in particular.

 
"Winning at all costs" has never been a real recipe for success. The wreckage left behind in the name of victory is almost always worse than the win itself. How many laws need to be bent or broken? How many people get tossed aside? How much are we really willing to sacrifice just so a few tech bros can duke it out for dominance?

It’s a slippery slope into moral decay, and I honestly can't understand why anyone would support it. But hey, as long as stock prices go up, who cares about the people who actually put in the work, right? Forget their sacrifices, profits matter more. F the little guys.
 
This is a complicated situation where government has to weigh the legal rights of authors, musicians, filmmakers and other creative forces on the one hand, and techbros on the other.

Wait, who am I kidding. This couldn't be easier.
TechBros, or getting outpaced by China because screw your copyright data.
 
TechBros, or getting outpaced by China because screw your copyright data.
I take it you’re not a creator of intellectual works.

Well how about we just let them set the standards? Probably best to give up and submit to the race to the bottom now, eh.
 
I take it you’re not a creator of intellectual works.

Well how about we just let them set the standards? Probably best to give up and submit to the race to the bottom now, eh.
So you would rather China just copy everything and take over while countries drunk on lawful power block all progress because someone doesn't want to be copied (going to be copied anyway by china).

Please... artists copy each other all the time and either makes it better or worse. The market decides who makes money, not your feelings.
 
I copied and pasted this comment of mine from a different article on here . Seems more relevant here:

If these AI gits get away scot-free with scraping places like Z-Library et al....don't come knocking on MY f@@@#$g door when I do the same!!!
 
Copyright is a state granted monopoly, it shouldn't exist.
If so, then who would have an incentive to create? :cool: Since nobody would own any intellectual property, very few people will bother to design anything.

BTW, communist/Marxist dogma is that only labor can increase the value of raw material. Design is nothing. perhaps this is why the Chinese feel free to steal others ideas.
 
If so, then who would have an incentive to create? :cool: Since nobody would own any intellectual property, very few people will bother to design anything.

BTW, communist/Marxist dogma is that only labor can increase the value of raw material. Design is nothing. perhaps this is why the Chinese feel free to steal others ideas.
People created things before copyright.
 
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