News Supreme Court Denies Review Thaler v Perlmutter 2026

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The U.S. Supreme Court denied certiorari in Thaler v. Perlmutter, No. 25-449, on March 2, 2026, declining to review whether an AI system can qualify as an "author" under the Copyright Act.[1][2]

Background

Dr. Stephen Thaler sought copyright registration for an artwork titled A Recent Entrance to Paradise, which was autonomously generated by his AI system, the "Creativity Machine" (also known as DABUS). Thaler listed the AI as the sole author and conceded that no human contributed creative input to the work.[3][4]

The U.S. Copyright Office denied registration, citing its longstanding policy requiring human authorship. Thaler sued the Register of Copyrights (Shira Perlmutter) in the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia.

Lower Court Rulings

The D.D.C. district court granted summary judgment for the Copyright Office, holding that human authorship is a "bedrock requirement" of copyright law.[4]

The D.C. Circuit affirmed on March 18, 2025, finding that the Copyright Act implicitly requires human authors based on provisions that assume human capacities — including property ownership, lifespan-based copyright terms, and the requirement for signatures.[1] The court rejected Thaler's arguments that the AI could qualify as an author under a work-made-for-hire theory or that ownership of the AI's creation could convey authorship rights.[4]

Supreme Court Denial

Thaler petitioned the Supreme Court for certiorari, arguing that the human-only authorship rule created a "chilling effect" on AI use and innovation.[4] The U.S. Department of Justice opposed certiorari, arguing that Thaler's case was a poor vehicle because he had disclaimed any human creative contribution, making the factual record unusually narrow.[4]

The Court denied certiorari on March 2, 2026, without comment, leaving the D.C. Circuit's ruling intact.[1][2]

Implications

The denial preserves the binding precedent that works generated entirely by AI — without meaningful human creative involvement — lack copyright protection. However, the ruling leaves unresolved the harder question of how much human involvement is sufficient for AI-assisted works to qualify for protection.[3][5]

Legal commentators have noted that future cases involving human-modified AI outputs may produce different outcomes, and that the threshold of "sufficient" human involvement will likely require either congressional action or further litigation to clarify.[6]

Related Cases

Thaler has also pursued parallel litigation on AI inventorship under patent law, equally without success. See Thaler v. Vidal.

References