The United States Copyright System
The Innovation Attorney | April 2026
A. Executive Summary
The United States copyright system is the legal architecture through which Congress, acting under Article I, Section 8 of the Constitution, has granted authors a limited monopoly over their original creative works. The Copyright Act of 1976, codified at Title 17 of the United States Code, provides the foundational framework, granting exclusive rights in literary, musical, dramatic, pictorial, graphic, sculptural, audiovisual, and architectural works, as well as sound recordings. That framework has been materially amended several times over the past four decades, most significantly by the Berne Convention Implementation Act of 1988, the Digital Millennium Copyright Act of 1998, the Sonny Bono Copyright Term Extension Act of 1998, the Music Modernization Act of 2018, and the CASE Act of 2020.
The system is built on a core bargain: the author receives a time-limited monopoly in exchange for eventual contribution of the work to the public domain. Duration for works created after January 1, 1978, runs for the life of the author plus seventy years. Works made for hire receive protection for ninety-five years from first publication or one hundred twenty years from creation, whichever is shorter. The fair use doctrine, codified at 17 U.S.C. Section 107, operates as the primary safety valve, permitting unauthorized use of copyrighted material when four statutory factors weigh in the user’s favor.
The most consequential current development is the emergence of artificial intelligence as both a tool and a challenger to the copyright system. The DC Circuit Court of Appeals held in March 2025 that human authorship is a statutory requirement, meaning AI systems cannot hold copyright. The US Copyright Office has issued guidance requiring meaningful human creative control as a condition of registration for AI-assisted works. Simultaneously, large-scale litigation over whether AI training on copyrighted datasets constitutes infringement is proceeding in federal district courts, with the outcome likely to define the commercial boundaries of the AI industry for a generation.
B. Detailed Findings
The Statutory Framework
The Copyright Act of 1976 replaced the Copyright Act of 1909 and took effect on January 1, 1978. It is a comprehensive federal statute that preempts all state law claims equivalent to copyright protection for works within its scope, pursuant to 17 U.S.C. Section 301. The Act established a unitary federal system in place of the dual system that had previously distinguished between common law copyright for unpublished works and federal statutory copyright for published works.
The Act defines the scope of protectable subject matter in Section 102, which extends copyright to eight categories: literary works; musical works, including accompanying words; dramatic works, including accompanying music; pantomimes and choreographic works; pictorial, graphic, and sculptural works; motion pictures and audiovisual works; sound recordings; and architectural works. The last category was added by amendment in 1990 to comply with requirements of the Berne Convention. Section 101 provides definitions for all of these categories and for key terms throughout the statute.
The Berne Convention Implementation Act of 1988 brought the United States into the Berne Union, the principal international copyright treaty, effective March 1, 1989. The most significant practical change was making copyright notice optional rather than mandatory. Prior to 1989, failure to affix proper copyright notice on published works resulted in loss of federal copyright protection. That requirement was eliminated entirely for works published after the effective date, though notice continues to provide evidentiary and deterrence benefits. The United States took what commentators described as a minimalist approach to Berne compliance, implementing only the changes strictly required by treaty obligations.
The Digital Millennium Copyright Act of 1998 added two major titles of direct commercial significance. Title II, which became Section 512 of the Copyright Act, created a conditional safe harbor system for online service providers, shielding them from liability for user-uploaded infringing content if they meet specified conditions including appointing a designated copyright agent, implementing a repeat infringer policy, and responding expeditiously to takedown notices. Title I, codified at Sections 1201 through 1205, prohibits circumvention of technological protection measures and removal of copyright management information. The anticircumvention provisions have been controversial for their effect on security research and lawful interoperability, and the Librarian of Congress conducts triennial rulemakings to grant limited exemptions.
The Music Modernization Act of 2018 modernized the licensing framework for digital music services. Title I created a blanket compulsory license administered by the Mechanical Licensing Collective, replacing a cumbersome system under which each streaming service was required to separately identify and license every musical composition. Title II, known as the CLASSICS Act, extended federal copyright protection to digital public performances of pre-1972 sound recordings, resolving a longstanding anomaly under which digital streaming services were required to pay performance royalties for post-1972 recordings but not for older recordings of equivalent commercial value. Title III established statutory performance royalties for producers, mixers, and sound engineers.
The CASE Act, enacted in December 2020, established the Copyright Claims Board within the Copyright Office as a voluntary alternative to federal court for small copyright disputes. The Board can award up to fifteen thousand dollars per work and thirty thousand dollars per case in total damages. Proceedings are conducted virtually and without formal discovery. As of March 2025, the Board had received approximately 1,222 total claims since it opened in June 2022, with roughly equal numbers of standard claims seeking up to thirty thousand dollars and smaller claims seeking up to five thousand dollars.
What Copyright Protects: Subject Matter and the Originality Threshold
Copyright protection attaches automatically at the moment a work satisfying two conditions is created: the work must be original, and it must be fixed in a tangible medium of expression. The fixation requirement is easily met, extending to everything from paper to hard drives to cloud servers. The originality requirement is the operative gatekeeping standard.
The Supreme Court defined the originality threshold in Feist Publications, Inc. v. Rural Telephone Service Co., 499 U.S. 340 (1991), holding that copyright requires independent creation combined with at least a minimal degree of creativity. The Court explicitly rejected the so-called sweat of the brow doctrine, under which courts had previously held that the expenditure of labor and effort alone was sufficient to support copyright in a compilation of facts. Facts themselves are never copyrightable; they belong to the public domain regardless of the effort required to discover them. The Court held that the alphabetical arrangement of white pages telephone listings was too mechanical and standard to constitute the creative expression required for copyright. The originality threshold is low, but it is real.
The idea-expression dichotomy, first articulated by the Supreme Court in Baker v. Selden, 100 U.S. 99 (1879), and codified in Section 102(b) of the Copyright Act, is the fundamental limit on what copyright can protect. Copyright protects the particular expression an author uses to convey an idea, not the idea itself. A novelist who creates a story about a detective in a fog-bound city owns the specific sentences and scenes in that novel; no other author is prevented from writing detective fiction set in similar environments. This principle prevents copyright from becoming a mechanism for monopolizing information, systems, methods, and concepts. The merger doctrine, a related principle, holds that when an idea can be expressed in only a limited number of ways, copyright does not protect the expression, because protection would effectively protect the idea itself.
The Six Exclusive Rights
Section 106 of the Copyright Act grants copyright owners six exclusive rights, subject to the limitations and exceptions in Sections 107 through 122. The reproduction right is the most fundamental: the right to make copies of the work in any form. The right to prepare derivative works covers translations, adaptations, arrangements, dramatizations, and any other form in which the work is recast, transformed, or adapted. The distribution right covers sale, rental, lease, and lending of copies to the public, subject to the first sale doctrine in Section 109, which permits the purchaser of a lawfully made copy to resell or otherwise dispose of that copy without authorization.
The public performance right applies to literary, musical, dramatic, and choreographic works, pantomimes, motion pictures, and other audiovisual works. It covers live performances, broadcasts, and digital streaming. The public display right applies to literary, musical, dramatic, choreographic, and pictorial works, allowing the copyright owner to control public exhibition of images of the work. The sixth exclusive right, added by amendment, is the right of public performance by digital audio transmission, which applies only to sound recordings and addresses the digital streaming market for recorded music.
The Visual Artists Rights Act of 1990, codified at Section 106A, granted moral rights to authors of works of visual art, defined narrowly to include paintings, drawings, prints, sculptures, and still photographs produced for exhibition purposes, in single copies or limited editions of two hundred or fewer. These rights include the right of attribution, the right of integrity preventing distortion or mutilation damaging to the author’s reputation, and the right to prevent intentional destruction of a work of recognized stature. Moral rights under the Act are non-transferable and last for the author’s life. The scope of Section 106A is significantly narrower than the moral rights protections required under the Berne Convention for works generally.
Duration and the Public Domain
For works created on or after January 1, 1978, copyright subsists for the life of the author plus seventy years. For works of joint authorship, the term runs seventy years from the death of the last surviving author. For works made for hire, anonymous works, and pseudonymous works, the term is ninety-five years from the year of first publication or one hundred twenty years from the year of creation, whichever expires first.
The current term length reflects the additions made by the Sonny Bono Copyright Term Extension Act of 1998, which extended all existing and future copyright terms by twenty years. The legislation was challenged on constitutional grounds in Eldred v. Ashcroft, 537 U.S. 186 (2003), where the Supreme Court upheld it under both the Copyright Clause and the First Amendment. Critics argued that extending terms for already-existing works serves no constitutional purpose because it cannot incentivize the creation of works that already exist. The Court held that Congress acted within its constitutional authority. The practical effect was to defer the entry of a substantial body of early twentieth century works into the public domain for an additional two decades.
Pre-1978 works are governed by the transitional provisions of Sections 303 and 304, which are among the most complex provisions in copyright law. Works that were in their first term of copyright on January 1, 1978, required timely renewal to receive an extended term. Works that had already received renewal by that date received the benefit of the Term Extension Act’s additional twenty years. Works created before 1978 that had never been published or registered were given a statutory copyright term under the 1976 Act, expiring no earlier than December 31, 2002, and extended to December 31, 2047, if they were published before the former date.
Fair Use: The Four-Factor Test and Its Evolution
Fair use is the most litigated and least predictable doctrine in copyright law. Section 107 codifies the doctrine as an exception to infringement liability for uses including criticism, comment, news reporting, teaching, scholarship, and research, evaluated through four non-exclusive factors: the purpose and character of the use, including whether it is commercial or nonprofit educational; the nature of the copyrighted work; the amount and substantiality of the portion used in relation to the work as a whole; and the effect of the use on the potential market for or value of the copyrighted work.
The Supreme Court’s decision in Campbell v. Acuff-Rose Music, Inc., 510 U.S. 569 (1994), established that the transformative character of a secondary work is the central consideration in fair use analysis, while holding that commerciality alone does not defeat a fair use defense. The Court held that 2 Live Crew’s parody of Roy Orbison’s composition could qualify as fair use and remanded the case for consideration of all four factors together. The decision expanded the fair use space for parody and commentary in the following decades, as lower courts applied the transformativeness inquiry broadly.
The Supreme Court significantly narrowed the fair use space for visual artists in Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts, Inc. v. Goldsmith, 598 U.S. 508 (2023). The Court held 7-2 that Andy Warhol’s orange silkscreen portrait of Prince, derived from a photograph by Lynn Goldsmith, did not qualify as fair use when licensed by the Warhol Foundation for use in a magazine article about Prince. The Court focused on the first factor, holding that the purpose and character of the use must be assessed in light of the specific use at issue, not the work’s overall artistic value. Because the Goldsmith photograph and the Warhol silkscreen were both used for the same basic purpose, commercial licensing for editorial publications about Prince, the purpose overlap weighed against fair use. The decision reined in the broad transformativeness analysis that had developed in lower courts, making fair use outcomes for derivative visual works substantially less predictable.
The Supreme Court’s decision in Google LLC v. Oracle America, Inc., 141 S. Ct. 1163 (2021), addressed fair use in a software context, holding 6-2 that Google’s copying of approximately 11,500 lines of Java SE application programming interface declaring code to build the Android platform was fair use. The Court emphasized the functional nature of the copied code, the small proportion of the overall Java SE platform it represented, and the transformative purpose served by enabling a new computing platform. The decision provided significant comfort to software developers who build on established application programming interfaces, though its narrow focus on the specific facts limits its broader application.
Copyright Registration
Copyright registration with the Copyright Office is not a condition of copyright protection, which arises automatically upon creation of a qualifying work. Registration is, however, a condition of bringing an infringement suit in federal court and a prerequisite for recovering statutory damages and attorney fees.
The Supreme Court resolved a circuit split on the timing of registration in Fourth Estate Public Benefit Corp. v. Wall-Street.com, LLC, 586 U.S. 296 (2019), holding unanimously that a copyright owner must obtain an actual certificate of registration from the Copyright Office before filing suit, not merely submit a pending application. The practical consequence is that copyright owners who lack timely registration face a gap period during which infringement is occurring but suit cannot be filed. The Copyright Office offers expedited registration processing for urgent situations, but even expedited processing introduces some delay.
Registration obtained before infringement begins, or within three months of first publication, is required to unlock statutory damages under 17 U.S.C. Section 504 and attorney fees under Section 505. These remedies are commercially significant: statutory damages of up to thirty thousand dollars per work, and up to one hundred fifty thousand dollars per work for willful infringement, can be recovered without proving actual damages. When timely registration is absent, the copyright owner is limited to actual damages, which may be difficult to quantify in cases of digital infringement.
Ownership, Transfers, and the Termination Right
Copyright initially vests in the author of the work. For works made for hire, the employer or commissioning party is treated as the author and initial copyright owner. A work qualifies as made for hire under either of two conditions: it is prepared by an employee within the scope of employment, or it is specially ordered or commissioned and the parties execute a written agreement designating it as a work for hire, but only if it falls within one of nine statutory categories set forth in the definition at Section 101.
The writing requirement for copyright transfers, set forth in Section 204, requires that any transfer of copyright ownership, including exclusive licenses, be in a signed written instrument. Oral agreements to transfer copyright are not enforceable as copyright transfers, though they may create other contractual obligations. Non-exclusive licenses need not be in writing and may be granted orally or implied from the circumstances.
The termination right in Sections 203 and 304(c) is one of the most commercially consequential provisions of the Copyright Act. It permits authors, or their statutory heirs after death, to terminate grants of copyright made on or after January 1, 1978, notwithstanding any contractual provision to the contrary. The right may be exercised by serving a notice during a five-year window beginning thirty-five years after the date of the grant. Termination notices have become significant commercial events in the music industry, where songwriters and their heirs have recaptured rights previously assigned to publishers under agreements executed decades earlier. The right is specifically non-waivable, meaning a contractual provision purporting to prevent the exercise of termination rights has no legal effect.
The DMCA Safe Harbor
Section 512 of the Copyright Act, added by the Digital Millennium Copyright Act of 1998, provides a structured safe harbor from copyright liability for online service providers that host user-generated content. To qualify for the safe harbor applicable to content stored at the direction of users, a provider must have no actual knowledge of the specific infringing activity, must lack awareness of facts or circumstances from which infringing activity is apparent, must not receive a financial benefit directly attributable to infringing activity when the provider has the ability to control such activity, and must respond expeditiously to remove or disable access to material upon receiving proper notification from a rights holder.
The Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit addressed the knowledge standard in Viacom International Inc. v. YouTube, Inc., 676 F.3d 19 (2d Cir. 2012), holding that YouTube qualified for the safe harbor despite the massive scale of infringing uploads on its platform. The court distinguished between general awareness that infringement occurs on a platform, which is insufficient to defeat the safe harbor, and actual or red flag knowledge of specific infringing instances, which must prompt action. The court also held that the willful blindness doctrine could apply to impute knowledge in appropriate circumstances.
The Copyright Office’s studies have concluded that the safe harbor system is operating in ways that diverge from Congressional intent, particularly with respect to the burden on rights holders to police platforms at scale, the specificity requirements for takedown notices, and the treatment of repeat infringers. These concerns have not yet produced statutory amendment, but they remain active subjects of policy discussion. The application of Section 512 to AI systems that generate or host content trained on copyrighted works is an unresolved question.
Infringement and Remedies
To establish copyright infringement, a plaintiff must prove ownership of a valid copyright and unauthorized copying of protected elements of the work. Copying is typically proved circumstantially through evidence of access to the work and substantial similarity between the defendant’s work and the protected expression in the plaintiff’s work. The substantial similarity standard varies by circuit; the Ninth Circuit applies a two-prong test combining an objective extrinsic analysis of specific expressive elements with a subjective intrinsic analysis of the overall concept and feel as experienced by a reasonable audience.
A successful plaintiff may recover either actual damages and the infringer’s profits attributable to infringement, or statutory damages. Statutory damages range from seven hundred fifty dollars to thirty thousand dollars per work infringed, at the court’s discretion. For willful infringement, the court may increase the award to one hundred fifty thousand dollars per work. For innocent infringement, the court may reduce the award to as little as two hundred dollars. The statutory damage exposure is calculated per work infringed, so litigation involving multiple copyrighted works can generate substantial aggregate exposure.
Following the Supreme Court’s decision in eBay Inc. v. MercExchange, L.L.C., 547 U.S. 388 (2006), a patent case whose reasoning courts have applied to copyright, permanent injunctions in intellectual property cases require the plaintiff to satisfy the traditional four-factor equitable test: irreparable harm, inadequacy of remedies at law, balance of hardships favoring the plaintiff, and public interest not disserved by the injunction. The automatic or near-automatic injunction that had previously characterized successful copyright infringement suits is no longer available. This change has been particularly significant in cases involving platform defendants where an injunction would disrupt services used by large numbers of non-infringing users.
Artificial Intelligence and the Evolving Copyright Frontier
The emergence of generative AI systems has created two distinct copyright questions that courts and the Copyright Office are now working through simultaneously. The first is whether AI systems can hold copyright in works they generate. The second is whether training AI systems on copyrighted works without authorization constitutes infringement.
The DC Circuit Court of Appeals resolved the authorship question in Thaler v. Perlmutter, decided March 18, 2025. The court held that human authorship is a statutory requirement under the Copyright Act of 1976, and that an artificial intelligence system cannot be recognized as an author within the meaning of the statute. The Copyright Office had denied registration to a work that Dr. Stephen Thaler claimed was created entirely by his AI system without human creative input, listing the AI as the author. The DC Circuit affirmed that the Copyright Office acted correctly. The Supreme Court denied certiorari in March 2026, allowing the decision to stand as binding circuit precedent.
The Copyright Office issued guidance in January 2025 clarifying that works involving AI tools can receive copyright protection if a human author exercised meaningful creative control over the expressive elements of the work. Prompt input alone is insufficient to constitute the required human authorship. The Office requires applicants to disclose the use of AI tools and to explain the nature of their human creative contributions. The line between protectable AI-assisted expression and unprotectable AI-generated output has not been fully defined and will require further administrative and judicial development.
The training data question is the higher-stakes commercial issue. The litigation brought by a major news organization against OpenAI and Microsoft, filed in January 2024, alleges that millions of copyrighted articles were used to train large language models without authorization or payment. The district court denied the defendants’ motion to dismiss in early 2025, allowing the case to proceed to trial. The defendants have raised fair use as their primary defense. The outcome will determine whether companies building AI systems must license the training data they use from copyright holders, a result that would impose substantial costs on the AI industry and potentially restructure licensing markets for published content.
C. Legal and Regulatory Implications
The Copyright Act of 1976, as amended, operates as a comprehensive federal regime that preempts state law in its domain. State law claims that are equivalent to copyright claims for works within the scope of federal copyright protection are preempted under Section 301. This preemption is not total: state law causes of action with elements qualitatively different from copyright infringement, such as breach of contract, fraud, and misappropriation in limited circumstances, survive preemption.
Registration is the central strategic compliance decision for copyright owners. Registration obtained before infringement, or within three months of first publication, preserves access to the full range of remedies including statutory damages and attorney fees. Copyright owners who fail to register promptly are not without legal recourse, but their practical ability to enforce copyright is significantly diminished because proving actual damages in infringement cases is often difficult and the costs of litigation may exceed recoverable actual damages. The Copyright Claims Board offers a lower-cost alternative for smaller disputes, but its remedies are capped and participation by the defendant is voluntary.
The DMCA safe harbor creates compliance obligations for operators of platforms hosting user-generated content. These obligations include designating and registering a copyright agent, implementing a policy for terminating repeat infringers, and maintaining a functioning notice-and-takedown system. The failure to satisfy any of these conditions can result in the loss of safe harbor protection and exposure to direct or secondary liability for user-uploaded infringing content. The liability exposure for platforms that do not qualify for safe harbor can be substantial given the scale of infringing activity that occurs on major platforms.
The DMCA’s anticircumvention provisions in Section 1201 create liability for circumventing access controls on copyrighted works, independent of whether any infringement occurs. This provision has been invoked against security researchers, interoperability developers, and others whose activities serve legitimate purposes. The triennial exemption rulemaking process provides limited relief but imposes procedural burdens and time-limited protections that create ongoing compliance uncertainty for technology companies engaged in lawful activities that incidentally involve circumvention.
The AI authorship and training data questions create material legal uncertainty for companies developing and deploying AI systems. Companies that have trained models on copyrighted content without licenses are potentially exposed to significant liability if the courts hold that such training constitutes infringement not protected by fair use. The scale of training datasets makes it impractical to obtain individual licenses for all training data, and no compulsory licensing regime currently exists for this purpose. Legislative proposals to address the training data question have been introduced in Congress, but no statute had been enacted as of April 2026.
D. Open Questions
The scope of fair use for AI training on copyrighted content remains the most commercially consequential unresolved question in copyright law. The litigation in federal court will eventually produce a ruling, but the path to a definitive Supreme Court resolution could take a decade or more. In the interim, the uncertainty creates significant risk for AI developers and for the publishers and rights holders who own the underlying content.
The line between protectable AI-assisted expression and unprotectable AI-generated output under the Copyright Office’s guidance requires further definition. The Office has stated that meaningful human creative control is required, but the application of that standard to the enormous variety of ways that human creators interact with AI tools will require case-by-case development that has barely begun.
The DMCA safe harbor’s application to AI-generated content and to AI systems that produce outputs trained on copyrighted works is unaddressed by statute and only beginning to be addressed by courts. Whether platforms that use AI to generate content can qualify for the user-generated content safe harbor is a novel question that will require legislative or judicial resolution.
The termination right is generating increasing commercial and legal activity as authors who granted rights in the 1980s become eligible to reclaim them. The application of termination rights to digital distribution rights granted under agreements that predate the digital market is contested, with disputes over whether the grant of digital rights falls within the scope of the original agreement and whether it can be terminated independently. The courts have not uniformly resolved these questions.
The future of the Copyright Claims Board as a practical enforcement mechanism is uncertain. Participation by defendants is voluntary; a respondent may opt out of CCB proceedings, returning the dispute to federal court and negating the cost advantages that motivated the claimant to use the Board. The Copyright Office’s 2025 study requested input on the Board’s efficacy, and the frequency of opt-outs and their strategic use by repeat defendant platforms is an emerging concern.
The international dimension of AI copyright disputes remains unresolved. The United States, European Union, Japan, and other major jurisdictions are developing distinct approaches to AI-generated content and training data, and the divergence creates compliance complexity for companies operating in multiple markets and may create forum selection incentives for future litigation.
This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit theinnovationattorney.substack.com/subscribe [https://theinnovationattorney.substack.com/subscribe?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_2]