Thomson Reuters vs. Ross Intelligence AI Copyright Trial Postponed

The highly anticipated AI copyright and fair use trial in Thomson Reuters v. Ross Intelligence, set to begin August 23, has been postponed, as the judge ordered both parties to resubmit summary judgment motions.

  • Third U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals Judge Stephanos Bibas issued a continuance without setting a new date for the trial.

  • The judge invited both parties to resubmit summary judgment motions.

  • This is the first major case to test whether copyright owners can prevent AI companies from training their models with copyrighted works.

The highly anticipated AI copyright and fair use trial in Thomson Reuters v. Ross Intelligence, set to begin August 23, has been postponed indefinitely, according to a Bloomberg Law report.

The judge overseeing the trial, Third U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals Judge Stephanos Bibas, sitting by designation in the U.S. District Court in Delaware, ordered a continuance on Thursday, August 22, following a request filed by Ross earlier in the week. The judge did not set a future date.

What’s next: “I invite Thomson Reuters to renew its motions for summary judgment on those issues and Ross to renew its cross-motion for summary judgment on fair use,” Judge Bibas said, according to LawSites

“Thus, the parties may submit two sets of additional briefing on (1) copyrightability, validity, and infringement, and (2) the defense of fair use,” the judge added.

What the case is about: Thomson Reuters, the parent company of Westlaw, alleges that Ross Intelligence unlawfully used its legal texts to train an AI-powered legal research tool. 

Reuters says Ross hired a third-party contractor to unlawfully copy Westlaw content—including its proprietary Key Number System and case headnotes—in order to train Ross’s own AI-driven natural language legal search engine. 

What the defense says: Ross insists that its use of the headnotes was transformative under the first fair use factor: the company converted the plain language into numerical data, which it then fed into a machine learning algorithm to teach the AI model about legal language.

Why it matters: Filed back in 2020, when generative AI was still in its incipient phase, this is the first major trial to determine whether AI companies can use copyrighted materials to train their AI models, a Copyright Lately report says.

No matter the outcome in this case, it will be pivotal for the future of AI as it will likely clarify the extent to which AI developers can use existing content under fair use or need explicit licenses.

Customer Stories

See how leading enterprise in-house teams have scaled smarter with Legal.io's high-caliber flex talent.

More from Legal.io


Top Court’s Illumina-Grail Ruling Deals Major Blow to EU Merger Policy

The EU’s merger oversight capabilities have taken a significant blow following a key ruling by the CJEU in the Illumina-Grail acquisition case. The court urged EU regulators to stick to revenue thresholds for examining mergers.

Sep 03, 2024
Read More
Snap taps longtime outside counsel Zachary Briers as new legal chief

Snap is hiring Munger Tolles partner Zachary Briers as general counsel, reinforcing deep outside-counsel ties as Michael O’Sullivan exits after eight years marked by heavy litigation and regulatory scrutiny.

Nov 20, 2025
Read More
Florida Eyes Break From ABA Law School Accreditation Amid National Review

A Florida Supreme Court panel proposed alternatives to the ABA's law school accreditation role, echoing similar moves in Texas, Ohio, and Tennessee.

Oct 30, 2025
Read More
Domestic Worker Visa Options
Domestic Worker Visa Options

It is not uncommon for many families and business people to bring personal assistants with them while traveling to the United States.

Aug 19, 2015
Read More
News Digest: Revolut scraps its panel, OpenAI enters legal, and Kirkland's $500M AI bet
News Digest: Revolut scraps its panel, OpenAI enters legal, and Kirkland's $500M AI bet

This week's digest with the latest Legal.io trends, insights, and updates to help you navigate your legal career.

Jun 05, 2026
Read More
Ready to hire?

Schedule a free consultation to discuss your hiring needs.

Free 15-min consultation
Legal.io Platform
5 star reviews
Hiring made smarter

Easy-to-use platform for hiring legal talent, managing spend, and optimizing your panel — plus an average savings of 50%.

Need Immediate Help?

Submit a hiring request and let our experts handle the entire process for you.