In a wild time for copyright law, the US Copyright Office has no leader
Itβs a tumultuous time for copyright in the United States, with dozens of potentially economy-shaking AI copyright lawsuits winding through the courts. Itβs also the most turbulent moment in the US Copyright Officeβs history. Described as βsleepyβ in the past, the Copyright Office has taken on new prominence during the AI boom, issuing key rulings about AI and copyright. It also hasnβt had a leader in more than a month.
In May, Copyright Register Shira Perlmutter was abruptly fired by email by the White Houseβs deputy director of personnel. Perlmutter is now suing the Trump administration, alleging that her firing was invalid; the government maintains that the executive branch has the authority to dismiss her. As the legality of the ouster is debated, the reality within the office is this: Thereβs effectively nobody in charge. And without a leader actually showing up at work, the Copyright Office is not totally business-as-usual; in fact, thereβs debate over whether the copyright certificates itβs issuing could be challenged.
The firing followed a pattern. The USCO is part of the Library of Congress; Perlmutter had been appointed to her role by Librarian of Congress Carla Hayden. A few days before Perlmutterβs dismissal, Hayden, who had been in her role since 2016, was also fired by the White House via email. The White House appointed Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche, who had previously served as President Trumpβs defense attorney, as the new acting Librarian of Congress.
Β© Manuel Augusto Marino via Getty