YOFUKA

Your late night window into anime, games, manga, and culture.

YOFUKA
YOFUKA

Your late night window into anime, games, manga, and culture.

Contact

contact@yofuka.com

© 2026 YOFUKA. All rights reserved.

As an Amazon Associate YOFUKA earns from qualifying purchases.

←Back to feed
CULTURE

Japan’s Agency for Cultural Affairs says AI output closely resembling copyrighted works may violate copyright, while the AI output itself may be uncopyrightable

Japan’s Agency for Cultural Affairs has found that AI-generated results that closely resemble copyrighted works could be treated as copyright violations. It also suggests the AI output itself would likely be uncopyrightable, though enforcement across borders may be difficult.

First seen Apr 19 ago·1 source covering

Sources (1)

Click any to read original

EN-ORIGINAL (1)

  • Japan's Agency for Cultural Affairs determined that AI output closely resembling copyrighted work could be ruled a copyright violation, and the AI output itself would likely be uncopyrightable. But global enforcement? That's tricky.

    Unseen Japan·Apr 19
0 Replies

Comments

Sign in to comment.Sign in

No comments yet. Start the thread.