In a ruling dated November 11, 2025, the Munich Regional Court I (Case No. 42 O 14139/24) prohibited OpenAI – the operator of ChatGPT – from, among other things, using certain protected song lyrics:
- to store in its systems,
- to be used for content generation,
- and to reproduce publicly,
unless a valid license exists. This significantly strengthens the artists' rights enshrined in copyright law – with considerable consequences, as this article will explain in more detail.
In this specific case, the issue concerned nine well-known song lyrics, including those by Herbert Grönemeyer, Helene Fischer, and Reinhard Mey, which were reproduced by ChatGPT without the copyright holders' consent. The court clarified that reproducing such content—even in part—violates the copyright of reproduction (§ 16 German Copyright Act) and the right of making works available to the public (§ 19a German Copyright Act). A clear statement, but one that, from a purely legal perspective, is mandatory and therefore only logical.
This constitutes a clear violation of copyright law (UrhG) – regardless of whether the use is purely algorithmic or human-controlled.