Back to Articles
Trump Reportedly Fires Head of US Copyright Office After AI Report Release

The Guardian

SKIPPED

Details

Date Published
11 May 2025
Priority Score
2
Australian
No
Created
12 May 2025, 06:41 pm

Authors (1)

Description

Dismissal of Shira Perlmutter follows firing of librarian of Congress, which oversees copyright office

Summary

The article reports on the firing of Shira Perlmutter, head of the US Copyright Office, following her publication of a report concerning the impact of AI technology on fair use law. This action by the Trump administration is seen as a political move, influenced by the recent focus on reshaping government operations, possibly to align with AI-driven efficiency efforts led by Elon Musk. While the report did not advocate immediate intervention, it underscores ongoing tensions between AI capabilities and existing intellectual property law. This incident highlights governance challenges at the intersection of AI development and regulatory frameworks but does not deeply delve into existential or catastrophic AI risks.

Body

Shira Perlmutter published a report about who artificial intelligence technology could run afoul of fair use law, days before her reported dismissal.Photograph: Mariam Zuhaib/APView image in fullscreenShira Perlmutter published a report about who artificial intelligence technology could run afoul of fair use law, days before her reported dismissal.Photograph: Mariam Zuhaib/APTrump reportedly fires head of US copyright office after release of AI reportDismissal of Shira Perlmutter follows firing of librarian of Congress, which oversees copyright officeUS politics live – latest updatesTheTrump administrationreportedly fired the head of the US copyright office over the weekend – within days of the dismissed official having published a report about how the development ofartificial intelligence (AI)technology could run afoul of fair use law.The sacking of Shira Perlmutter as the register of copyrights and director of the copyrights office on Saturday, asreportedby the Washington Post andNBC News, came two days after Donald Trumpfiredthe librarian of Congress, who oversees the copyright office.Perlmutter took over the copyrights office in 2020, and some of her employees suspect her firing may stem from her recent report on how using copyrighted material to train AI tech could overstep laws governing fair use, according to the Post’s reporting.The New York congressman Joe Morelle, a Democrat, also speculated that Perlmutter’s report may have motivated the Trump administration to fire her,callingher dismissal a “brazen, unprecedented power grab”.The report from Perlmutter was not highly critical of the use of AI, saying the copyright office believed “government intervention would be premature at this time”.Trump abruptly fires librarian of Congress in latest purge of governmentRead moreSince the second Trump administration took office in January, the so-called “department of government efficiency” (Doge) overseen seen by the billionaire Elon Musk has been tasked with slashing federal spending. And Dogereportedlyhas been attempting to use AI to make cuts to federal funding.Additionally, Musk, a staunch Trump ally who owns an AI firm himself, has publiclysupporteddeleting intellectual property laws.Perlmutter’s firing evidently signals another step by theTrump administrationto reshape the federal government by ousting officials who he believes may resist his agenda.Just days earlier, Trump abruptly fired Carla Hayden as librarian of Congress. Hayden was the first woman and the first Black person to serve in the role. According to the White House, her firing was due to her pursuing diversity, equity and inclusion (DEI) programs which Trump has pledged to eliminate.skip past newsletter promotionafter newsletter promotionHayden had been targeted by rightwing groups who accused her of promoting children’s books that the groups claim are inappropriate. The conservative American Accountability Foundation had urged the Trump administration to fire her, saying she was “woke” and “anti-Trump”.The Library of Congress in Washington DC is available to the public, holding millions of items, including books and historical documents. It also administers copyright law through its oversight of the copyright office.Explore more on these topicsTrump administrationArtificial intelligence (AI)US politicsnewsShareReuse this content