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Apple Sued Over AI Training

(3w ago)
Cupertino, United States
macrumors.com
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Three YouTube channels filed a DMCA lawsuit against Apple for allegedly scraping copyrighted videos to train AI, raising questions about creators' rights in the generative AI boom. For gamers, this could set a precedent affecting everything from Let’s Plays to modding tools—if the courts side with content creators.

📷 Published: Apr 6, 2026 at 18:14 UTC

Mara Flux
AuthorMara FluxSociety editor"Can spot the real winners and losers before lunch."
  • YouTube Channels Sue Apple
  • DMCA Violation Alleged
  • AI Models Impacted

Three established YouTube channels have sued Apple, alleging that the company violated the U.S. Digital Millennium Copyright Act (DMCA) by unlawfully accessing and scraping millions of copyrighted videos from YouTube to train its AI models. This lawsuit, filed in California federal court, claims Apple deliberately circumvented YouTube's protections against video scraping and profited substantially from the practice. According to MacRumors, the complaint cites Apple's research papers as evidence that videos uploaded by the plaintiffs were used to train its AI models.

The lawsuit is a significant development in the ongoing debate about AI training data and copyright infringement. As The Verge notes, the use of copyrighted material to train AI models is a common practice, but it raises important questions about the ownership and control of creative content.

The patch that actually changes everything for creators

Article image📷 Published: Apr 6, 2026 at 18:14 UTC

For the gaming community, this lawsuit has significant implications. As Wired reports, the use of AI models trained on copyrighted material can lead to biased and unfair outcomes. The community is responding to the news with a mix of concern and outrage, with some users noting that this is not only unlawful but also an unconscionable attack on creators. According to Reddit, the community is calling for greater transparency and accountability in the use of AI training data.

The real signal here is that the use of copyrighted material to train AI models is a complex issue that requires careful consideration and regulation. As TechCrunch notes, the lawsuit highlights the need for clearer guidelines and standards for the use of AI training data.

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