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71 UCLA L. Rev. 1484 (2024)
Fair Use Defenses in Disruptive Technology Cases

handle is hein.journals/uclalr71 and id is 1508 raw text is: 












Fair  Use   Defenses in Disruptive Technology Cases


Pamela Samuelson


ABSTRACT

The fair use limitation on the scope of authorial exclusive rights is expected to be the main defense
in lawsuits charging generative artificial intelligence (AI) developers with copyright infringement.
These lawsuits-brought by and on behalf of some authors, artists, and copyright industry rights
holders-challenge  the legality of the unauthorized use of in-copyright works for purposes
of developing generative Al systems, which they allege has greatly harmed the plaintiffs. The
outcome of these copyright infringement suits will likely turn on courts' assessments of the fair use
doctrine's market effects factor: whether and to what extent generative Al is harming or is likely to
harm  plaintiffs' existing and expected markets.

Controversies about new and  unexpected uses of copyrighted works enabled by technological
advances are far from new; they continue to play an integral part in the development of modern
copyright law. This Article revisits numerous disputes over uses of in-copyright works enabled by
disruptive technologies since the 1970s. These disputes involved copying of research and educational
materials, home video and audio taping, and storage and processing of digital copies for the purpose
of developing search engines and other research tools. Tracing the evolution of the concept of
market harm  and the role it has played in copyright fair use cases involving new technologies, this
Article lays out the arguments about market effects-harmful and beneficial effects, as well as the
requirements of proof-that have been presented in the courts and debated in Congress. The Article
then assesses the current landscape of generative AI copyright litigation. Insights gained from the
past can be instrumental in thinking about conflicts involving generative AI, as well as any future
technologies that are new, innovative, and disruptive.



AUTHOR

Richard M. Sherman  Distinguished Professor of Law, Berkeley Law School. I am grateful for the
opportunity to deliver the annual Melville Nimmer Lecture at UCLA, given in November 2023, for
which this Article was prepared.


71 UCLA L. REV. 1484 (2024)

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