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| '''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.<ref name="mbw">{{cite web |url=https://www.musicbusinessworldwide.com/gema-vs-suno-german-court-hears-landmark-ai-music-copyright-case/ |title=GEMA vs. Suno: German Court Hears Landmark AI Music Copyright Case |publisher=Music Business Worldwide |date=March 2026 |accessdate=April 7, 2026}}</ref><ref name="gunnercooke">{{cite web |url=https://gunnercooke.com/ai-in-the-sights-german-court-sets-new-standards-for-music-rights/ |title=AI in the Sights: German Court Sets New Standards for Music Rights |publisher=Gunnercooke |date=2026 |accessdate=April 7, 2026}}</ref><ref name="haerting">{{cite web |url=https://haerting.de/en/insights/first-day-of-hearings-in-the-legal-dispute-gema-vs-suno-inc-on-ai-generated-songs/ |title=First Day of Hearings in GEMA vs. Suno |publisher=Haerting |date=March 2026 |accessdate=April 7, 2026}}</ref>
| | #REDIRECT [[News March 09 2026]] |
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| == Background ==
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| 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.<ref name="mbw" /><ref name="haerting" /> 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.<ref name="mbw" /><ref name="haerting" />
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| == Proceedings ==
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| The oral hearing was held March 9, 2026, at the Munich Regional Court I.<ref name="mbw" /><ref name="haerting" /> The hearing concluded without a ruling; Suno must respond in writing by April 7, 2026.<ref name="haerting" /> Suno argues no infringement occurred, as outputs are not recognizable copies but mathematical patterns derived from training data.<ref name="haerting" />
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| == Significance ==
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| The GEMA case is closely watched internationally because it could set precedent for AI music training liability in Europe.<ref name="gunnercooke" /> 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.<ref name="gunnercooke" /><ref name="mbw" /> 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.<ref name="twobirds">{{cite web |url=https://www.twobirds.com/en/insights/2025/landmark-ruling-of-the-munich-regional-court-gema-v-openai-on-copyright-and-ai-training |title=Landmark Ruling of the Munich Regional Court (GEMA v. OpenAI) on Copyright and AI Training |publisher=Bird & Bird |date=2025 |accessdate=April 7, 2026}}</ref><ref name="chambers">{{cite web |url=https://chambers.com/articles/the-historic-ruling-of-the-regional-court-in-munich-in-the-gema-vs-openai-case |title=The Historic Ruling in GEMA v. OpenAI |publisher=Chambers |date=2025 |accessdate=April 7, 2026}}</ref>
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| == Related cases ==
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| * [[UMG Recordings, Inc. v. Suno, Inc.]] — U.S. litigation by major record labels
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| * [[UMG Recordings, Inc. v. Uncharted Labs, Inc.]] — U.S. case against Udio parent company
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| == References ==
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| <references />
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| [[Category:Copyright Litigation]]
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| [[Category:Music Industry]]
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| [[Category:International]]
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