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    Home » Amazon Sued by YouTubers for Allegedly Scraping Millions of Videos to Train its AI Video Tool
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    Amazon Sued by YouTubers for Allegedly Scraping Millions of Videos to Train its AI Video Tool

    Errica JensenBy Errica JensenApril 16, 2026No Comments5 Mins Read
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    A battle between a golf instruction channel and one of the world’s most powerful corporations takes place in a federal courthouse in Seattle, which is almost ridiculous. However, that is the current situation. In early April 2026, three YouTube creators, including the team behind h3h3 Productions and two golf-focused channels, filed a class action lawsuit against Amazon, alleging that the company had surreptitiously circumvented YouTube’s security measures in order to gather millions of videos and feed them into its AI video generator, Nova Reel. One of the most intricate creator lawsuits to come out of the AI training data wave is this one, which was filed in the U.S. District Court for the Western District of Washington. The details are worth carefully examining.

    Amazon is accused of more than just scraping videos, according to the complaint. It claims that Amazon created a system with the express purpose of avoiding detection. The plaintiffs claim that in order to extract data from millions of YouTube videos at scale without triggering the platform’s safeguards against bulk downloading, Amazon used automated downloading tools in conjunction with virtual machines that cycled through rotating IP addresses. It’s not a coincidence. Architecture is that. Those systems were created, approved, and directed towards YouTube by someone. Federal court will now decide whether that amounts to deliberate violation of copyright protections under the Digital Millennium Copyright Act.

    The biggest named plaintiff is Ted Entertainment, a media company founded by Ethan and Hila Klein in California. With more than 5,800 videos and more than 4 billion views overall across channels like h3h3 Productions and H3 Podcast Highlights, the company has a massive YouTube presence. Alongside Ted Entertainment are Golfholics, a golf-focused channel with millions of views, and Matt Fisher, the owner of the MrShortGame Golf channel with over 500,000 subscribers. Although the combination seems surprising on paper, it makes strategic sense: plaintiffs with a variety of genres, audience sizes, and content types bolster the claim that Amazon’s purported scraping was indiscriminate and systematic rather than targeted.

    FieldDetails
    DefendantAmazon.com, Inc. (Amazon Web Services / AWS)
    AI System at IssueNova Reel — a text-to-video generative AI model
    Launch of Nova Models2024, via AWS Bedrock
    CourtU.S. District Court for the Western District of Washington, Seattle
    Filing DateApril 4, 2026
    Type of ActionProposed nationwide class action lawsuit
    Named PlaintiffsTed Entertainment, Inc. (H3H3 Productions / H3 Podcast); Matt Fisher (MrShortGame Golf); Golfholics
    H3H3 Scale5,800+ videos; 4 billion+ combined views
    Legal ClaimsDigital Millennium Copyright Act (DMCA) anti-circumvention violations; copyright infringement
    Alleged MethodsVirtual machines, rotating IP addresses, automated downloading tools to bypass YouTube protections
    Damages SoughtStatutory damages, attorneys’ fees, injunction to stop further alleged infringement
    Amazon ResponseDeclined to comment, citing ongoing litigation
    Related CasesNYT vs. OpenAI & Microsoft; authors vs. Microsoft; musicians vs. Google; Snap YouTuber lawsuit
    Amazon Sued by YouTubers for Allegedly Scraping Millions of Videos to Train its AI Video Tool
    Amazon Sued by YouTubers for Allegedly Scraping Millions of Videos to Train its AI Video Tool

    The complaint’s main tool, Nova Reel, was introduced by Amazon Web Services Bedrock in 2024. It converts text prompts and images into brief video clips; this is the kind of capability that needs massive amounts of actual video content to train efficiently. Citing ongoing litigation, Amazon has refrained from commenting on the lawsuit. In any case, that silence says nothing about the case’s merits and is standard legal procedure. It does not, however, resolve the underlying issues.

    YouTube has clear terms of service: bulk downloading is forbidden, scraping is not permitted, and the platform has several security measures in place to uphold these regulations. The platform’s own words are quoted in the complaint, which states that unapproved scraping “undermines the value we provide back to creators in exchange for their work.” It’s a pointed framing. According to the plaintiffs, one of the biggest tech companies in the world appears to have violated the implicit agreement between YouTube and its creators—you upload, we protect, the ecosystem functions—rather than a bad actor working from a basement server.

    As these cases mount, there’s a sense that the early development of the AI industry was partially predicated on the silent presumption that courts wouldn’t act quickly enough or with enough concern to effectively regulate what went into training datasets. This assumption is currently being tested concurrently from several angles. Microsoft and OpenAI are being sued by the New York Times. Several AI companies have been the target of class action lawsuits filed by authors. Google has been targeted by musicians whose content was featured on YouTube. Similar cases have already been resolved by Anthropic and the music-generation startup Suno. Case by case, the legal landscape is changing, and the Amazon lawsuit adds a new dimension by concentrating on video, which up until recently occupied a more subdued area of the AI copyright debate than text and images.

    Particular attention should be paid to one line in the complaint. The plaintiffs state unequivocally that once AI consumes content, it is stored in neural network weights and cannot be removed or retracted, acknowledging that the harm may already be irreversible in a technical sense. They are suing for more than just money. They are suing to put an end to continued use, prove that the incident was unlawful, and establish a legal deterrent for future incidents. The request for an injunction in addition to damages shows that the authors know they won’t get away with it. They are attempting to prevent the next bell from being rung without authorization.

    In the end, it’s still unclear how courts will distinguish between infringement and fair use when it comes to AI training data. This is a truly unresolved legal issue, and various courts have taken different stances on it. However, because of the allegations of circumvention, the Amazon case might be more difficult to reject on fair use grounds than some others. When someone passively processes data that is available to the public, you can debate transformation and fair use. When you’ve purportedly developed a system to actively circumvent platform safeguards intended to stop precisely what you’re doing, it becomes more difficult.


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    Nothing published on Creative Learning Guild — including news articles, legal news, lawsuit summaries, settlement guides, legal analysis, financial commentary, expert opinion, educational content, or any other material — constitutes legal advice, financial advice, investment advice, or professional counsel of any kind. All content on this website is provided strictly for informational, educational, and news reporting purposes only. Consult your legal or financial advisor before taking any step.

    Amazon Sued by YouTubers
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    Errica Jensen
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    Errica Jensen is the Senior Editor at Creative Learning Guild, where she leads editorial coverage of legal news, landmark lawsuits, class action settlements, and consumer rights developments and News across the United Kingdom, United States and beyond. With a career spanning over a decade at the intersection of legal journalism, lawsuits, settlements and educational publishing, Errica brings both rigorous research discipline, in-depth knowledge, experience and an accessible editorial voice to subjects that most readers find interesting and helpful.

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