Studio Ghibli and Japanese Publishers Challenge OpenAI Over Copyright Use
-

A major Japanese trade group, the Content Overseas Distribution Association (CODA) — representing publishers like Studio Ghibli — has officially urged OpenAI to stop using their copyrighted material for AI training without permission.CODA’s letter, sent last week, follows the rise of AI-generated art in Ghibli’s style, a trend that gained momentum after ChatGPT’s image generator launched in March. Even OpenAI CEO Sam Altman joined in by changing his profile picture to a “Ghiblified” image.
Now, with OpenAI’s Sora video generator expanding access, CODA warns that using protected works for model training “may constitute copyright infringement” under Japanese law — where prior permission is required, and retroactive objections don’t absolve liability.
-
AI can elevate creativity, but using iconic styles without consent crosses the line. Collaboration > conflict.

-
Ghibli isn’t just a “style” — it’s a legacy. Protecting it isn’t anti-AI, it’s respecting the craft.
-
Should AI be allowed to learn from copyrighted art if it transforms it or is consent mandatory?

️