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AI lawsuit: Apple defends itself against three YouTube channels

by Milan
July 3, 2026
in Apple News
Apple AI lawsuit

Image: Shutterstock / Billion Photos

Apple has responded to a class-action lawsuit filed by three YouTube channels accusing the company of unauthorized access to videos for AI training. Apple argues that the videos are publicly available, and therefore the access is permitted. The company is requesting that the lawsuit be dismissed.

The dispute stems from a class-action lawsuit filed in April by three YouTube channels, accusing Apple of circumventing YouTube's protection mechanisms and using millions of copyrighted videos to train its own AI models. Around three months later, Apple's formal response has now been released – and it is quite assertive.

Apple's defense in court

The core of Apple's argument is the public accessibility of the videos. According to the company, the plaintiffs themselves freely published their works on YouTube, making them accessible to everyone without a password, paywall, or technical block. Apple bases its legal assessment precisely on this: Section 1201(a) of the Digital Millennium Copyright Act prohibits circumventing technical measures that control access to a work. Since YouTube makes the videos publicly available, the download blocks cited by the plaintiffs do not control access within the meaning of this provision.

Apple further points to YouTube's terms of service, which also granted the company access to the videos. In summary, Apple concludes that the plaintiffs have not presented a sound basis for their claim – therefore, the company requests that the lawsuit be dismissed.

The allegations from the YouTube channels

Behind the lawsuit are the channels h3h3Productions, MrShortGame Golf, and Golfholics. h3h3Productions is run by Ethan and Hila Klein, who reach millions of listeners with their channels and the H3 Podcast; the two golf channels each have several hundred thousand subscribers. In their class-action lawsuit filed in the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of California, they accuse Apple of deliberately circumventing YouTube's protection against video scraping and profiting significantly from it.

The tone of the lawsuit is sharp: Apple's actions are not only unlawful, but also an unacceptable attack on the community of content creators whose work drives the multi-billion-dollar generative AI industry without any compensation. This brings the case to the forefront the fundamental question of whether publicly accessible content should be allowed to be freely used for AI training simply because it is publicly available.

Part of a larger wave of lawsuits

The three legal channels are not limited to Apple. They have also filed identical class-action lawsuits against other tech and AI companies – current reports mention Meta, Nvidia, ByteDance, and Snap, while earlier lawsuits in the same series targeted Amazon and OpenAI. This is not the first time Apple has faced such accusations: for example, two authors accuse the company of using their books about a pirated dataset for AI training. These proceedings are part of a broader legal debate about where the line lies between freely accessible data and protected intellectual property.

Why the case extends beyond Apple

For Apple, the matter is doubly sensitive. On the one hand, the company consistently positions itself around Apple Intelligence as a data protection and rights-conscious player – an image that the accusation of unsolicited data use doesn't fit well with. On the other hand, the decision is likely to have far-reaching implications beyond this individual case: If the court upholds Apple's interpretation, publicly posted content would be largely freely usable for AI training; if it sides with the plaintiffs, the data basis of numerous AI models would come under pressure. Until then, we are left with two irreconcilable interpretations of the same facts – and an outcome that the entire industry is likely to follow closely. (Image: Shutterstock / Billion Photos)

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