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September Copyright Reads

10 September 2025

3 mins

We have finally arrived in September and by the time you read this blog post I will be enjoying a well deserved break at Longleat Forest, Center Parcs appreciating the Giant Redwoods.

I think that was enough holiday envy. As it is custom now for the monthly copyright reads, I will unveil the Romanian calendar name for September which is vinicer. Etymology is rather obscure, however, it is thought to have to do with wines and winery. September, late September, would usually be the time that we would harvest the grapes and make homemade wine. Not great taste, but the must (grape juice) would be amazing. Getting that first mug (yes, you read that right) of must meant that autumn is finally here.

Anyway, enough with the getting lost on memory lane. We have some great reads for you this month. Of course we continue looking at AI in its various forms and its various ways it continues to have an impact on copyright works, indigenous art, and somewhat disturbing cat AI slop videos. We also look at copyright and knitting, science, Baby Shark song issues, and James Bond trademark legal fight. We also share the research done on copyright anxiety in the UK and Canada. A must read for all copyright geeks. Shall we??!

Who actually benefits from an AI licensing regime?

AI Slop: Last Week Tonight with John Oliver (HBO) [Video]

The Productivity Commission is floating AI copyright exemptions – with worrying implications for Australian authors and publishers

Judge sends ChatGPT-using lawyer to AI school with $5,500 fine after he’s caught creating imaginary caselaw: ‘Any lawyer unaware that using generative AI platforms to do legal research is playing with fire is living in a cloud’

Those Fascist Social Media Posts by DHS Have a Copyright Problem

Technological Aspects of Generative AI in the Context of Copyright

Artificial Intelligence and Academic Professions

So, what’s it really like to live with a heat pump?

“Wir brauchen eine gemeinsame Kraftanstrengung” [Article in German, discussing paper mills and reporting of false claims]

Wikimedia Foundation Challenges UK Online Safety Act Regulations

How Indigenous engineers are using AI to preserve their culture

AI industry horrified to face largest copyright class action ever certified

Is Upcycling the New IP Infringement?

Columbia Sportswear sues Columbia University for trademark infringement

How Copyright Licensing Powers Collaboration & Innovation in the Energy Industry

Anthropic Faces Billions in Copyright Damages for 7 Million Pirated Works in Bartz v. Anthropic AI Training Decision

Human factor in European museums’ intellectual property management through sociocultural, legal, political and economic determinants

Reaching teachers and learners through reuse of cultural heritage

Copyright notice: knitting and sewing patterns

Beyond the Technology: how is generative AI supporting creativity?

BioNTech settles Covid-19 patent dispute with CureVac

Former TSMC staff arrested for alleged theft of chipmaker’s technology

Authors celebrate “historic” settlement coming soon in Anthropic class action

From royal hatters to top tailors: James Bond lawyers line up trademark fight team

Baby Shark song not plagiarised – South Korean top court

Copyright Anxiety and Legal Chill in Higher Education: A Comparison of Canada and the United Kingdom (UK)

Resources on Copyright and AI: Updated FAQ and Position Paper on “Lawful Access” and Fair Use

VIDEO: Calls to protect Indigenous intellectual property from AI

We hope you enjoyed this month’s copyright reads! Why not subscribe to our monthly digest?

Here’s to fresh notebooks, new beginnings, and endless possibilities—wishing everyone a brilliant start to the academic year!

September – 1917 – Rijksmuseum, Netherlands – Public Domain.

Open Research

Copyright, Open Access and all things Open Research

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