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OpenAI Faces Landmark Ruling Over ChatGPT Training Data

2025-11-13Richard Cantillon3 minutes read
AI
Copyright
Tech Law

In a case that pits artistic creation against artificial intelligence, a Munich court has delivered a significant ruling against the US tech giant OpenAI. The verdict found that the company broke copyright law, a decision sparked in part by the lyrics of German folk singer Reinhard Mey’s 1974 hit, Über die Wolken (Above the Clouds).

The court determined that OpenAI took the song's theme of limitless freedom too literally. It ruled that the company illegally used protected song lyrics to train its ChatGPT software without securing the necessary licenses, representing a major legal challenge for the AI developer.

The Heart of the Complaint Hit Song Lyrics

The lawsuit was initiated by Gema, Germany's primary music rights organization, which represents musicians, composers, and lyricists. Acting on behalf of its members, Gema presented a test case centered on 10 popular German songs whose lyrics it claimed were used without permission to train ChatGPT.

Beyond Mey's classic folk song, the complaint included lyrics from modern hits like Atemlos (Breathless) by Helene Fischer, one of the most successful songs in German pop history. Gema argued that the AI's ability to reproduce these lyrics on command was clear evidence of copyright infringement.

OpenAI's Defense and the Court's Rejection

In response, lawyers for OpenAI argued that its language models do not function as a simple database that stores and copies training material. Instead, they claimed the models learn patterns from a vast dataset and generate responses based on that learned knowledge.

Furthermore, OpenAI contended that the lyrics would only be reproduced if a user specifically prompted the AI to do so. This defense, likened to a "guns don’t kill people, people do" argument, failed to persuade the Munich regional court. The court concluded that OpenAI was directly responsible for infringing on Gema's members' copyrights by enabling ChatGPT to memorize and then reproduce the lyrics without a license.

A Landmark Ruling with European Implications

The court has ordered OpenAI to pay undisclosed damages for the infringement. While the San Francisco-based company has stated its intention to appeal, Gema is celebrating the decision as potentially "the first landmark AI ruling in Europe."

Gema's chief executive, Tobias Holzmüller, issued a strong warning to AI companies, stating that the internet cannot be treated as a "self-service store." He emphasized that "human creative achievements are not free templates." The ruling suggests that even an AI colossus can be held accountable, or as Reinhard Mey's lyrics put it: “What once seemed big and important is suddenly inane and small.”

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