A judge has tossed nearly all of the claims a group of developers brought against GitHub, Microsoft, and OpenAI in a copyright lawsuit filed in 2022, as reported earlier by The Register. In a court order unsealed last week, a California judge left only two claims standing: one that accuses the companies of an open-source license violation and another that alleges breach of contract.
- Home
- Technology
- News
The developers suing over GitHub Copilot got dealt a major blow in court
A California judge dismissed many of the claims outlined in a copyright lawsuit that accuses GitHub, Microsoft, and OpenAI of copying developers’ code.


The original lawsuit made 22 claims against the trio, accusing them of violating copyright laws by allowing the AI-powered GitHub Copilot coding assistant to train on developers’ work. Microsoft, the owner of GitHub, uses OpenAI’s technology to power the tool. All three companies asked the court to throw out the lawsuit in January, but Judge Jon Tigar denied their request.
However, Judge Tigar’s latest ruling deals a blow to the accusation that GitHub Copilot violates the Digital Millennium Copyright Act (DMCA) by suggesting code without proper attribution. Although the court previously ruled that Copilot’s suggested code wasn’t close enough to its original source, an amended version of the complaint takes issue with GitHub’s duplication detection filter, which users can toggle on to “detect and suppress” Copilot suggestions matching public code found on GitHub.
The amended lawsuit argues that GitHub gives users the option to “receive identical code” when the filter is turned off. It also cites a study that shows how AI models can “memorize” and regurgitate parts of their training data, which could potentially include copyrighted code.
This didn’t hold up in court, as Judge Tigar determined that the code GitHub allegedly copied from developers wasn’t similar enough to their original work. He also mentions a part of the cited study that says GitHub Copilot “rarely emits memorized code in benign situations.” Judge Tigar dismissed this allegation with prejudice, meaning the developers can’t refile the claim. The court also dismissed requests for punitive damages, as well as monetary relief in the form of unjust enrichment.
This doesn’t mean the lawsuit is over. Litigation will likely continue with the developers’ claims regarding breach of contract and open-source license violations.

Digital prize bonds to launch in Pakistan
- 11 hours ago
Thousands without power as cyclone Alfred strikes Queensland
- 11 hours ago

Gunmen open fire at Toronto pub, 12 injured
- 10 hours ago

Rain, snowfall expected across Punjab and KP from March 9 to 16
- 12 hours ago
Champions Trophy final: India’s bowlers lead charge, restrict New Zealand to 251/7
- 9 hours ago

Former senator’s brother shot dead in Swabi
- 12 hours ago

Two suspects arrested for illegal human smuggling
- 7 hours ago

Women, cop arrested in honey trap blackmail scheme in Lahore
- 12 hours ago
Israeli tourist, local woman gang-raped in India
- 11 hours ago
US Secret Service shoots armed man near White House
- 7 hours ago
Over 1,000 killed in violent clashes in Syria’s coastal region
- 10 hours ago

WhatsApp testing Meta AI widget for easy access
- 9 hours ago