AI News & TrendsEU, US diverge on AI data rights, licensing fees in 2026
The United States and European Union may be taking different approaches to AI data rights and licensing fees. In the US, developers often rely on fair use to train AI, while Europe appears to suggest collective licensing with flat-rate fees for copyrighted data. Model outputs are now a contested area, as some developers restrict others from using their outputs to train new models, although open community models seem to be catching up in performance and lowering costs. Regulators are considering tools like privacy technologies and watermarking to balance openness, safety, and compensation. These changes might lead to new ways of managing AI rights and payments, but the exact rules are still under debate.













