News-May-03-2026
May 3, 2026 — Daily digest of AI law developments.
This article consolidates news stories from May 1-3, 2026.
Contents
1. Pentagon Awards Seven AI Contracts for Classified Networks 2. Academy Awards Establishes First AI Eligibility Rules 3. AI ModelForge Sued Over Instagram Scraping and Non-Consensual AI Imagery
Pentagon Awards Seven AI Contracts for Classified Networks
The U.S. Department of Defense announced on May 1, 2026 agreements with Google, Microsoft, AWS, Nvidia, OpenAI, Reflection, and SpaceX to deploy their AI systems on classified military networks. Anthropic was excluded following its legal fight with the Trump administration over AI ethics and autonomous weapons safeguards.[1]
See individual article: Pentagon AI Classified Contracts
Academy Awards Establishes First AI Eligibility Rules
The Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences released 2027 Oscars rules on May 1, 2026 requiring that screenplays be "human-authored" and performances be "demonstrably performed by humans with their consent." AI tools neither help nor harm nomination chances, but the Academy reserves the right to request AI usage disclosures.[2]
See individual article: Oscars AI Rules for 2027
AI ModelForge Sued Over Instagram Scraping and Non-Consensual AI Imagery
Three women sued Arizona-based operators of AI ModelForge and CreatorCore, alleging the defendants scraped Instagram photos to generate AI pornographic content sold on Fanvue. The platform allegedly had over 8,000 subscribers generating 500,000+ AI images. The complaint asserts right of publicity, privacy, and non-consensual imagery claims.[3]
See individual article: AI ModelForge Lawsuit