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Intellectual Property Lawyers France 2026: Copyright, Generative AI & Media Rights Liability

By Global Law Experts
– posted 4 hours ago

Last updated: 6 May 2026

France’s intellectual property landscape shifted decisively in early 2026, creating urgent compliance obligations for every organisation that trains, deploys or publishes generative-AI outputs touching copyrighted content. The European Parliament adopted a resolution on copyright and generative AI on 10 March 2026, calling for binding transparency requirements on AI developers that use protected works as training data. Less than a month later, the French Senate adopted a bill on 8 April 2026 that would insert a new Article L. 331-4 into the Code de la propriété intellectuelle (CPI), establishing specific liability and licensing obligations for publishers, platforms and model operators.

For general counsel, media executives and compliance officers operating in or targeting the French market, engaging experienced intellectual property lawyers France practitioners have access to is no longer optional, it is the frontline of risk management across copyright, neighbouring rights and AI training-data governance.

Executive Summary and Immediate Compliance Decision

If your organisation publishes, distributes or trains AI models using copyrighted material, including neighbouring-rights content such as recorded performances, phonograms or broadcast signals, in or for France, you must act now. The combination of the EU Parliament resolution and the French Senate bill creates a compliance landscape in which passive reliance on older text-and-data-mining (TDM) exceptions is increasingly inadequate. Industry observers expect enforcement authorities and rightsholders to move swiftly once the Senate bill completes its legislative passage, meaning the cost of delay rises with every quarter.

At a minimum, in-house teams should undertake three steps immediately:

  • Audit all training datasets. Catalogue every source of copyrighted or neighbouring-rights material used in current or planned AI models and map each source to its rightsholder.
  • Conduct a licensing gap analysis. Compare the rights you hold against the rights you need, for training, for output publication and for downstream commercial exploitation, under both EU-level and French national rules.
  • Update supplier and customer contracts. Ensure AI vendor agreements contain dataset-origin warranties, IP indemnities, audit rights and deletion obligations that reflect the 2026 changes.

The sections below walk through each of these steps in detail, providing checklists, sample clauses and sector-specific worked examples tailored to the French market. For organisations with cross-border operations, this guidance should be read alongside our guide on how to protect your intellectual property across borders.

What Changed in 2026: EU and France Regulatory Snapshot on Copyright AI France 2026

EU Parliament Resolution, 10 March 2026

On 10 March 2026, the European Parliament adopted a resolution on copyright and generative AI that, while not directly binding, sets a clear policy direction for future EU legislation and exerts significant influence on national lawmakers. The resolution calls on the European Commission to propose legislation ensuring that AI developers disclose the copyrighted works used to train their models and to establish mechanisms for fair remuneration of rightsholders.

The resolution’s practical implications for organisations operating in France include the following:

  • Transparency obligations. AI developers would be expected to maintain and, upon request, disclose detailed records of all copyrighted and neighbouring-rights material ingested during training.
  • Remuneration frameworks. The resolution encourages collective licensing models and equitable remuneration schemes, signalling that free-riding on copyrighted training data faces increasing political opposition.
  • Reinforcement of the TDM opt-out. The resolution reaffirms that rightsholders’ Article 4 opt-out under the DSM Directive must be technically effective, and that AI developers bear the burden of verifying whether a rightsholder has reserved their rights.

Although the resolution does not amend existing EU law, early indications suggest it will inform Commission legislative proposals expected later in 2026 or 2027. French copyright lawyers are already advising clients to treat the resolution’s principles as a forward compliance benchmark.

French Senate Bill, 8 April 2026: Insertion of Article L.331-4

The French Senate adopted a bill on 8 April 2026 that would insert a new Article L.331-4 into the CPI, specifically addressing generative AI copyright liability. As of the date of this article, the bill has been adopted by the Senate and awaits consideration by the Assemblée nationale; readers should consult the official Senate website for the latest legislative status.

The key features of the bill, as adopted by the Senate, include:

  • Express liability for AI-assisted reproduction. Entities that train generative-AI models on copyrighted or neighbouring-rights material without authorisation may face direct civil liability, including injunctive relief and damages.
  • Notification and clearance duties. Model operators would be required to notify relevant collecting societies and rightsholders before ingesting protected content, creating a pre-training clearance workflow.
  • Enhanced remedies. The bill contemplates statutory damages and the possibility of administrative sanctions, supplementing existing CPI remedies available to rightsholders.

The likely practical effect will be to shift the compliance burden upstream: model vendors and AI developers will need to demonstrate lawful provenance of training data before deployment, rather than responding to infringement claims after the fact. For a deeper analysis of the intersection between generative AI and French copyright, see our article on generative AI and copyright, France 2026.

French Copyright and Neighbouring-Rights Legal Framework for Intellectual Property Lawyers France

Copyright Basics and Authorship Issues for AI Outputs

Under the CPI, copyright protection arises automatically upon the creation of an original work bearing the personal stamp of its author. French law does not require registration. The droit d’auteur system protects both economic rights (reproduction, representation, adaptation) and moral rights (attribution, integrity, disclosure, withdrawal). A critical threshold question for generative AI is whether an AI-generated output qualifies as a “work” at all: under settled French doctrine, authorship requires a natural person who makes creative choices. Outputs produced autonomously by a machine, without meaningful human creative input, are unlikely to attract copyright protection.

However, where a human user provides sufficiently original creative direction, selecting prompts, curating outputs and exercising editorial judgment, the resulting work may qualify for protection, with authorship vesting in the human contributor. This distinction has direct commercial significance: organisations publishing AI-assisted content must assess, on a case-by-case basis, whether human involvement is sufficient to create protectable rights, and, conversely, whether the training process itself has infringed someone else’s rights.

Neighbouring Rights: Broadcasters, Performers, Phonogram Producers

Beyond copyright, the CPI grants separate neighbouring rights (droits voisins) to performers, phonogram and videogram producers, and broadcasting organisations. These rights are distinct from the author’s copyright and require independent clearance. For media companies deploying generative AI, the neighbouring-rights layer is often the most complex because a single piece of audiovisual content may embed multiple layers of rights held by different parties.

Entity Type Typical Protected Rights in France Licensing Trigger for AI Use / Publication
Author (writer, photographer, composer) Copyright, economic rights (reproduction, adaptation, communication to the public) and moral rights (attribution, integrity) Training on works; reproducing or publishing AI outputs derived from protected expression
Performer / phonogram producer Neighbouring rights, fixation, reproduction, making available to the public Use of recorded performances or phonograms in training datasets; streaming or re-use of AI outputs incorporating such material
Broadcaster Neighbouring rights, communication to the public, fixation of broadcasts Reuse of broadcast content for model training; distribution of model outputs replicating or derived from broadcast material

Understanding which rights apply, and who holds them, is a precondition for any legitimate AI training or deployment pipeline. For comprehensive guidance on international intellectual property considerations across jurisdictions, our practice guide provides additional context.

How Article L.331-4 Changes Liability and Licensing in Practice

Liability Allocation: Model Vendors vs Content Owners vs Platforms

The Article L.331-4 framework, as adopted by the Senate on 8 April 2026, creates a multi-tier liability structure designed to reach every link in the generative-AI value chain. Model developers bear primary responsibility for ensuring that training datasets comply with copyright and neighbouring-rights requirements. However, the bill extends potential liability to downstream actors, publishers that commission or distribute AI-generated content, and platforms that host or facilitate its dissemination, where those actors knew or should have known that the underlying model was trained on unlicensed material.

This allocation mirrors the layered approach familiar from French case law on platform liability but goes further by imposing affirmative due-diligence duties. Industry observers expect that, once enacted, the provision will require publishers and platforms to obtain representations from their AI vendors regarding dataset provenance, creating a contractual compliance cascade that flows from model developer to end user.

The generative AI copyright liability exposure is significant: the bill contemplates both traditional compensatory damages and the possibility of statutory damages calibrated to the volume of infringing material ingested. Injunctive relief, including orders to delete infringing training data or cease model deployment, is also available. These remedies are cumulative with existing CPI enforcement tools, meaning rightsholders can pursue multiple channels simultaneously.

Safe Harbour Limits and Risk Mitigation

The bill preserves a limited safe harbour for entities that can demonstrate they implemented reasonable technical and organisational measures to identify and exclude reserved or unlicensed content from their training pipelines. To benefit from this safe harbour, organisations must maintain auditable records showing:

  • Compliance with rightsholder opt-out signals (e.g., robots.txt, metadata flags, contractual reservations).
  • Pre-training due diligence, including rightsholder identification and licence verification.
  • Prompt response to takedown notices or rightsholder objections.

From a contractual standpoint, the practical effect is that AI vendor agreements must now include robust dataset-provenance warranties, indemnification clauses and audit rights to preserve downstream safe-harbour protections. Organisations that fail to secure these protections may find themselves jointly liable with their vendors for upstream training-data violations.

Licensing: Training Data, Outputs and Neighbouring Rights, Practical Checklist

Pre-Training Due Diligence

Before any copyrighted or neighbouring-rights material enters a training pipeline, counsel should ensure the following steps are completed:

  • Dataset inventory. Create a comprehensive catalogue of all content sources, including URLs, file metadata, rightsholder names and licence status.
  • Provenance verification. Confirm the chain of custody for each dataset: who collected it, under what authority, and whether downstream use for AI training was authorised.
  • Rightsholder mapping. Identify every rightsholder (author, performer, producer, broadcaster) whose rights are engaged, distinguishing copyright from neighbouring rights.
  • Opt-out compliance. Verify whether any rightsholder has exercised an Article 4 DSM Directive opt-out (or equivalent contractual reservation) and exclude that material.

Licence Types and Drafting Checklist

AI training data licensing in France typically requires multiple layers of authorisation. Counsel should address each of the following licence types in the drafting process:

  • Training licence. Grants the right to ingest, reproduce and process copyrighted works for the purpose of training a generative-AI model.
  • Output exploitation licence. Authorises the publication, distribution or commercialisation of AI-generated outputs that may incorporate or derive from licensed material.
  • Performer and producer consents. Separate authorisations from performers (via ADAMI or SPEDIDAM) and phonogram/videogram producers (via SCPP or SPPF) for use of neighbouring-rights material.
  • Moral rights provisions. While French moral rights cannot be waived, contractual provisions should address attribution requirements and prohibit modifications that could violate the integrity right.

Sample Licence Terms to Include

When negotiating copyright licensing for publishers and AI developers, the following terms merit inclusion:

  • Remuneration model. Specify whether royalties are calculated per-work, per-ingestion, per-output or as a flat fee; include audit rights to verify volumes.
  • Attribution obligations. Detail how and where the rightsholder will be credited in outputs and associated metadata.
  • Revocation rights. Define the circumstances under which the rightsholder can revoke the licence and the consequences for models already trained.
  • Territorial scope. Clarify whether the licence covers France only or extends to other jurisdictions.
  • Data deletion. Oblige the licensee to delete training data upon licence expiry or revocation, and to certify deletion in writing.

Board-level micro-checklist (10 items):

  1. Complete dataset inventory and provenance audit.
  2. Map all rightsholders (copyright + neighbouring rights).
  3. Check opt-out compliance (DSM Directive Article 4).
  4. Obtain training licences from collecting societies (SACEM, ADAMI, SPEDIDAM, SCPP).
  5. Negotiate output exploitation licences.
  6. Secure performer and producer consents.
  7. Address moral rights in all licence agreements.
  8. Insert audit, deletion and revocation clauses.
  9. Review AI vendor contracts for dataset-origin warranties.
  10. Establish internal recordkeeping for regulatory compliance.

Contracts and Model Vendor Clauses

Sample Clause Bank, Draft Templates

The following clause templates are provided for illustrative purposes only and must be adapted to the specific facts, jurisdictions and commercial arrangements of each transaction. They do not constitute legal advice.

  • Dataset warranty. “The Vendor represents and warrants that all datasets used to train the Model have been lawfully obtained, that the Vendor holds or has secured all necessary licences, consents and authorisations, including from performers, phonogram producers and broadcasters, required under the Code de la propriété intellectuelle and applicable EU law, and that no material subject to a valid opt-out has been included in the training corpus.”
  • Scope of licence. “The licence granted herein covers [training / fine-tuning / inference] only. Any distribution, public communication or commercial exploitation of Model outputs that reproduce, adapt or incorporate licensed material requires a separate written authorisation from the relevant rightsholder(s).”
  • Indemnity. “The Vendor shall indemnify, defend and hold harmless the Client against all claims, damages, costs and expenses (including reasonable legal fees) arising from any actual or alleged infringement of copyright, neighbouring rights or database rights resulting from the use of the Vendor’s training datasets or Model outputs.”
  • Audit and deletion. “Upon reasonable notice, the Client (or its designated auditor) shall have the right to audit the Vendor’s training data records to verify compliance with this Agreement. Upon termination or expiry, the Vendor shall permanently delete all licensed training data and certify such deletion in writing within [30] days.”
  • Insurance. “The Vendor shall maintain professional indemnity and cyber-liability insurance in an amount not less than [€X] per occurrence, covering claims arising from intellectual-property infringement related to AI training and deployment.”

These clauses should be reviewed against the specific requirements of Article L.331-4 France once the bill completes its legislative passage. For background on IP clauses in employment relationships, see our analysis of essential intellectual-property clauses in employment contracts.

Media Sector Use-Cases: Broadcasters, Streaming Platforms and Publishers

Scenario A, National broadcaster training an internal model on archive footage. A French broadcaster holds extensive audiovisual archives containing performances, phonograms and original editorial content. Training an internal AI model on this archive engages both the broadcaster’s own neighbouring rights and the separate rights of performers and phonogram producers whose works are embedded in the footage. Before commencing training, the broadcaster must: identify all performers and producers; secure consents from ADAMI and SPEDIDAM for performer rights; obtain authorisation from SCPP or SPPF for phonogram rights; and ensure that any original works (scripts, music compositions) are licensed from their authors or via SACEM.

Scenario B, Publisher fine-tuning a model for news summarisation. A digital publisher wishes to fine-tune a third-party large language model using licensed news articles, photographs and wire-service content. The publisher must confirm that its existing content-licensing agreements expressly permit AI training use, many legacy agreements predate generative AI and do not include such permission. Where the agreement is silent, a supplementary training licence is required. The publisher must also address database-rights issues if it draws on structured data compilations, and moral-rights obligations (particularly attribution) for any AI outputs that paraphrase or adapt original journalism.

Scenario C, Streaming platform using user-uploaded clips to train recommender features. A platform that hosts user-generated content faces particular complexity because the rights in uploaded clips may belong to third parties unknown to the platform. Under the Article L.331-4 framework, the platform cannot rely solely on its terms of service to claim implied licence rights over user uploads for AI training purposes. Instead, the platform should implement a dedicated opt-in or opt-out mechanism for AI training, maintain robust notice-and-takedown workflows, and secure contractual representations from uploaders regarding ownership.

Clearance Workflow and Key Contacts for Media Rights Clearance France

The recommended media rights clearance France workflow follows four stages: (1) rights mapping, identify all works and rightsholders in the dataset; (2) clearance, contact the relevant collecting societies and individual rightsholders; (3) contract, negotiate and execute training and output exploitation licences; (4) recordkeeping, maintain auditable logs of all authorisations, opt-outs and deletions.

Rights Category Collecting Society / Contact Typical Scope
Musical works (authors, composers) SACEM Reproduction, adaptation, communication to the public
Performers (featured artists) ADAMI Fixation, reproduction, making available
Performers (session musicians, extras) SPEDIDAM Fixation, reproduction, making available
Phonogram producers SCPP / SPPF Reproduction, making available to the public

Risk Matrix and Decision Flowchart for GCs

The following risk matrix helps general counsel prioritise compliance efforts based on the probability and impact of enforcement action:

Activity Probability of Claim Impact if Enforced Recommended Action
Train on fully internal, owned content Low Low Document ownership; check employee/contractor IP assignments
Train on licensed third-party content Medium Medium Verify licence scope covers AI training; negotiate supplementary rights
Publish outputs reproducing a known protected work High High Obtain specific reproduction licence or exclude from outputs
Outputs referencing identified performers High High Secure performer consents via ADAMI/SPEDIDAM; implement output filtering

Decision flow: Can you identify the source material in the training data or output? If yes, obtain the relevant licence from the rightsholder or collecting society, or exclude the material. If no, implement dataset curation to reduce unidentified content, apply for blanket licences where available, and maintain robust indemnities with upstream vendors.

Compliance and Enforcement: Remedies, Litigation Trends and Regulatory Outlook

French courts have long been active enforcers of copyright and neighbouring rights, and industry observers expect the 2026 reforms to accelerate litigation in the generative-AI space. Existing remedies under the CPI include injunctive relief (including référé, urgent interim orders), compensatory damages, disgorgement of profits and seizure of infringing copies. The Senate bill’s contemplated statutory damages and administrative sanctions would add additional enforcement tools, particularly useful where actual damages are difficult to quantify, as is often the case with AI training at scale.

The EU Parliament resolution, while not binding, sends a strong signal that EU-wide legislation may follow, potentially harmonising transparency and remuneration obligations across Member States. Multinational organisations should monitor developments at both the French and EU levels and be prepared to adjust their compliance programmes accordingly.

How to Prepare for Audits, Takedown Notices and Regulator Inquiries

  • Maintain a compliance dossier. Compile all training-data licences, rightsholder authorisations, opt-out verification records and dataset-deletion certificates in a single, auditable file.
  • Designate a response coordinator. Appoint a single point of contact for takedown notices and regulator inquiries, with authority to implement interim measures (e.g., suspending model deployment) pending review.
  • Conduct periodic self-audits. Review training pipelines at least quarterly to verify continued compliance with licence terms, opt-out obligations and evolving legislation.
  • Engage specialist counsel. Experienced intellectual property lawyers France practitioners work with can provide real-time guidance on enforcement actions and regulatory changes. Browse the GLE lawyer directory for qualified professionals.

Conclusion and Next Steps

The 2026 reforms, the EU Parliament resolution of 10 March 2026 and the French Senate bill adopted on 8 April 2026, have moved copyright and generative AI from an area of regulatory ambiguity into one of defined, enforceable obligations. For general counsel, in-house IP teams and media executives, the path forward requires three concrete actions: first, audit every training dataset for copyright and neighbouring-rights exposure; second, complete a licensing gap analysis covering training use, output publication and performer/producer rights; and third, update all AI vendor and customer contracts to include the warranties, indemnities and audit provisions described in this guide.

The stakes are high, both in terms of potential liability and competitive advantage. Organisations that invest in robust compliance now will be better positioned to deploy generative AI responsibly, protect their content assets and avoid costly enforcement actions. Intellectual property lawyers France has at its disposal bring deep expertise in the CPI, collecting-society relationships and cross-border IP strategy needed to navigate this evolving landscape with confidence.

Need Legal Advice?

This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Nathalie Marchand at d’Alverny Avocats, a member of the Global Law Experts network.

Sources

  1. European Parliament, Resolution on Copyright and Generative AI (10 March 2026)
  2. Legifrance, Code de la propriété intellectuelle
  3. JD Supra, Navigating Copyright in the Age of Generative AI
  4. European Commission, AI Policy
  5. SACEM, French Collecting Society for Authors, Composers and Publishers
  6. ADAMI, Administration of Performers’ Rights
  7. SPEDIDAM, Collecting Society for Performers
  8. SCPP, Civil Society of Phonogram Producers
  9. WIPO, World Intellectual Property Organization

FAQs

How will French law treat copyright for works generated or processed by generative AI in 2026?
Under French law, copyright protection requires an original work bearing the personal creative stamp of a human author. Outputs produced autonomously by AI, without meaningful human creative direction, are unlikely to qualify for copyright protection. However, where a human exercises genuine editorial and creative choices in directing the AI, the resulting work may be protectable. The EU Parliament resolution of 10 March 2026 and the French Senate bill of 8 April 2026 further clarify transparency and licensing obligations around the use of copyrighted training data, reinforcing that authorisation from rightsholders is needed before commercialisation of AI-assisted works.
The new Article L.331-4, as adopted by the French Senate on 8 April 2026, establishes direct civil liability for entities that train generative-AI models on copyrighted or neighbouring-rights material without authorisation. It imposes notification and clearance duties on model operators, extends potential liability to downstream publishers and platforms that knew or should have known about unlicensed training data, and contemplates statutory damages and administrative sanctions. Organisations should immediately review their AI vendor contracts and implement pre-training due diligence workflows.
In most cases, yes. Existing text-and-data-mining exceptions under the DSM Directive are subject to rightsholder opt-out, and the 2026 French reforms reinforce the need for express authorisation. Separate licences are typically required for training use (ingestion and reproduction of works), output exploitation (publication or commercialisation of AI-generated content) and neighbouring-rights clearance (performer and producer consents). Organisations should contact relevant collecting societies, SACEM, ADAMI, SPEDIDAM and SCPP, and negotiate supplementary licence terms where existing agreements are silent on AI use.
Neighbouring rights in France protect performers, phonogram/videogram producers and broadcasters independently of the author’s copyright. A single piece of audiovisual content may embed multiple layers of neighbouring rights requiring separate licences. Broadcasters training AI on archive footage must secure performer consents (via ADAMI and SPEDIDAM), phonogram-producer authorisations (via SCPP or SPPF) and verify that any underlying copyrighted works are also licensed. Streaming platforms face additional complexity where user-uploaded content contains third-party neighbouring-rights material.
Essential clauses include: dataset-origin warranties confirming lawful provenance of all training data; scope-of-licence provisions distinguishing training use from output commercialisation; IP indemnities covering copyright and neighbouring-rights claims; audit rights allowing the client to verify dataset compliance; deletion obligations upon licence expiry or termination; and insurance requirements covering IP-related claims. These clauses should be reviewed and updated as Article L.331-4 completes its legislative passage.
No. The European Parliament resolution is a policy statement that calls on the European Commission to propose binding legislation. It does not, by itself, amend existing EU copyright law or create directly enforceable obligations. However, it carries significant political weight and signals the direction of future EU-level regulation. French lawmakers have already drawn on its principles in drafting the Senate bill, and industry observers expect Commission proposals to follow. Organisations should treat the resolution’s principles as a forward compliance benchmark.
This article includes illustrative clause templates covering dataset warranties, scope-of-licence provisions, indemnities, audit rights and deletion obligations. These templates are provided as starting points and must be adapted to specific commercial arrangements and legal requirements. For bespoke drafting tailored to French copyright and neighbouring-rights obligations, organisations should consult qualified intellectual property counsel with experience in CPI-compliant AI licensing. A sample clause bank tailored for France is also available as a downloadable resource.

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Intellectual Property Lawyers France 2026: Copyright, Generative AI & Media Rights Liability

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