News GEMA v Suno 2026: Difference between revisions

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Latest revision as of 02:34, 28 April 2026

April 6, 2026 — A German court is expected to issue a ruling on June 12, 2026, in GEMA v. Suno, a landmark case at the Munich Regional Court I concerning whether Suno, Inc. infringed copyrights by using protected sound recordings to train its generative AI music model without licenses.[1][2][3]

Background

GEMA, Germany's music collecting society representing over 100,000 members and two million rightsholders worldwide, sued US-based AI music generator Suno on January 21, 2025, alleging unauthorized use, storage, and reproduction of copyrighted song recordings to train its AI tool.[1][3] GEMA claims Suno's outputs are "misleadingly similar" to originals in melody, harmony, and rhythm, constituting unauthorized reproduction and making available to the public under German copyright law.[1][3]

Proceedings

The oral hearing was held March 9, 2026, at the Munich Regional Court I.[1][3] The hearing concluded without a ruling; Suno must respond in writing by April 7, 2026.[3] Suno argues no infringement occurred, as outputs are not recognizable copies but mathematical patterns derived from training data.[3]

Significance

The GEMA case is closely watched internationally because it could set precedent for AI music training liability in Europe.[2] Unlike U.S. fair use doctrine, German copyright law has no general fair use exception, potentially making AI companies more vulnerable to infringement claims in European jurisdictions.[2][1] This follows GEMA's separate win against OpenAI (Munich Regional Court, case no. 42 O 14139/24, ruled November 11, 2025), where the court found unauthorized reproduction of song lyrics in GPT-4/4o models.[4][5]

Related cases

References