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U.S. Judge Delays Final Approval of Anthropic’s $1.5 Billion Copyright Settlement

Courtroom
May 15, 2026 06:08 PM IST | Written by Neelam Sharma | Edited by Pratima O Pareek

Marking another twist in one of the AI industry’s most closely watched copyright cases, a federal judge has delayed final approval of Anthropic’s proposed $1.5 billion copyright settlement with authors who accused the AI company of illegally using pirated books to train Claude,

At a hearing in San Francisco on May 14, 2026, U.S. District Judge Araceli Martinez asked both sides for more information, particularly regarding attorneys’ fees and payments to lead plaintiffs.

The proposed deal covers 482,460 eligible works and is described as the largest known U.S. copyright settlement. Claims were filed for 440,490 of those works, which is about 92%, against a typical 10% in class action cases. Each eligible work is expected to receive approximately $3,000 after fees and costs, according to the Authors Guild.

The legal battle began after a group of writers sued Anthropic, backed by Amazon and Alphabet, in 2024, accusing the company of downloading pirated books from Library Genesis and Pirate Library Mirror to train Claude without permission.

In June 2025, now-retired Judge William Alsup ruled that training on legally acquired books constituted fair use but declined to extend that finding to piracy, leaving Anthropic exposed to a December trial on damages before the settlement was reached.

Objections at the hearing included undercounting of group copyright registrations, exclusion of foreign works not registered with the U.S. Copyright Office, and disputed publisher-author splits. One class member said a publisher claimed 88% of her per-work payout, leaving her 12%, according to Authors Alliance, an authors’ advocacy organization.

Separately, 28 authors who opted out, including Dave Eggers and Vendela Vida, filed a new copyright infringement lawsuit against Anthropic in California on Wednesday, requesting a jury trial.

Also Read: Anthropic Wins as Judge Temporarily Blocks Trump Administration Ban in DoD Dispute

Authors

  • Neelam Sharma, reporter at AI FrontPage

    Neelam Sharma is a passionate storyteller, and journalist with over a decade of experience across leading Indian media houses.
    Known for her calm presence on screen and powerful storytelling off it, Neelam brings a rare blend of credibility, creativity, and empathy to journalism. Her strength lies in ground reporting and research-driven narratives that connect with the heart of the audience. Whether covering social issues, human-interest features, or breaking news, she combines factual depth with a human touch—making every story not just informative.

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  • Pratima Pareek, Editor and Co-founder of AI FrontPage

    Pratima O Pareek is an Editor and Co-Founder of AI FrontPage. A gold medalist in Mass Communication and Journalism, she's worked across national and international newsrooms, bringing sharp editorial instincts and a commitment to clarity. She believes in cutting through the noise to deliver stories that actually matter.
    Off the clock, she watches offbeat cinema, follows tennis, and explores new places like a traveler, not a tourist.

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