Apple says public YouTube videos can be used in AI lawsuit defense
AI-summarised brief · reviewed before publication
Apple is requesting a federal court to dismiss a lawsuit filed by a group of YouTubers, who claim the company scraped their videos to train internal AI models. The lawsuit, headed by Ted Entertainment, was filed in April 2026 and also involves two golf channels. Apple argues that publicly available YouTube videos are lawfully accessible under the DMCA and YouTube's Terms of Service. The company claims that the plaintiffs made the videos public and that YouTube's measures to prevent unauthorized downloading do not control access to the works. Apple is requesting the court to throw out the lawsuit as the plaintiffs have failed to state a claim, citing the public nature of the videos and the applicable laws.
💡 Why It Matters
- · Apple's defense relies on the notion that public YouTube videos are fair game for access, which could set a precedent for how companies use online content to train AI models.
- · By dismissing the lawsuit, the court would affirm that publicly available content can be used for such purposes.