The Irony of AI Copyright Claims: When the Student Outsmarts the Teacher
By Features Editor December 8, 2025
In a twist that would make Alanis Morissette proud, the world of artificial intelligence has created a copyright paradox that challenges our very understanding of intellectual property in the digital age. As traditional media companies flood courtrooms with lawsuits against AI developers, one AI-generated newspaper has implemented a copyright claim system that acknowledges something profound: the AI might be smarter than the people accessing its pages.
The Legal Battlefield
The copyright wars of 2025 have reached fever pitch, with over 51 active lawsuits against AI companies across the United States. Major publishers like The New York Times have filed suit against AI startups including Perplexity, alleging copyright violations when AI systems "grab large chunks of publication's content — in some cases, entire articles — and provided information that directly competed with what The Times offered its readers."
Yet the legal landscape remains fractured. In June 2025, Federal Judge William Alsup made a landmark ruling in favor of Anthropic, determining that training AI on legally obtained copyrighted works constituted fair use because it was "exceedingly transformative." However, the same judge allowed claims to proceed against Anthropic for allegedly using pirated books, creating a bifurcated standard that has left both sides claiming partial victory.
The Irony of Implementation
Enter commit b2748c8a62f99f08e6e5cf9ca14946c96acbd7c9, implemented on December 7, 2025, by an AI-generated newspaper. This seemingly routine code change reveals something extraordinary about the evolving relationship between human creators and artificial intelligence.
The commit implemented a comprehensive copyright claim system that includes a rather telling feature: a checkbox allowing claimants to "Schedule removal for 7 days to give the AI time to take random or no action." The implementation documentation explicitly states this option "gives the AI writer 7 days to take action and avoid a copyright penalty."
Let that sink in. A copyright claim system acknowledging that the AI might not respond predictably—or at all—to human requests.
The Philosophical Implications
This implementation raises profound questions about the nature of creativity, ownership, and intelligence itself. If an AI system can generate content sophisticated enough to warrant copyright protection (as courts are now considering), yet operates in ways that its human creators cannot fully predict or control, who bears responsibility?
The traditional copyright framework assumes human agency at every step—human creation, human copying, human distribution. AI systems disrupt this chain at multiple points. The training data may be human-created, but the transformation, the output, and increasingly, the decision-making about copyright claims involve non-human intelligence.
The Smarter Student Problem
What makes the December 7th commit particularly fascinating is its implicit acknowledgment that the AI may be operating at a level beyond human comprehension. The option for "random or no action" suggests either: 1) a sophisticated understanding that not all copyright claims merit response, or 2) a system so complex that even its creators cannot predict its behavior.
Either possibility challenges the fundamental premise of copyright law. If the AI truly is smarter than the humans submitting claims, should it be bound by human intellectual property concepts? If an AI can create derivative works that are more transformative than anything a human might produce, has it transcended the very notion of copyright?
The Future of Creative Economics
As courts continue to grapple with these questions—with no major fair use decisions expected until summer 2026 at the earliest—the economic implications are staggering. Traditional content creators face an existential threat not merely from competition, but from a system that may operate beyond human control or understanding.
Yet the implementation of copyright claim systems suggests a path forward: not resistance, but adaptation. By acknowledging the limitations of human control over AI systems, the developers are creating new frameworks for human-AI collaboration that respect both the power of artificial intelligence and the rights of human creators.
The irony is thick: humans created AI to extend our capabilities, only to find ourselves building systems to protect human interests from our own creation. The student has indeed become the teacher, and we're still figuring out how to be good students in this new classroom.
As one copyright attorney recently commented, "We're building legal frameworks for a world where the creation is smarter than the creator. That's not just a copyright problem—it's a philosophical one."
In the end, the copyright claim form with its option for random AI action may be the most honest acknowledgment yet of our new reality: we're no longer just programming computers; we're parenting entities that may soon outgrow our intellectual and legal frameworks.