Shira Perlmutter (born 1956) is an American attorney and law professor who has served as the 14th register of copyrights of the United States Copyright Office in the Library of Congress, since 2020. Before her appointment as register in 2020, Perlmutter led copyright and global law policy at the United States Patent and Trademark Office. In 1995, she was appointed to be the first associate register for policy and international affairs at the Copyright Office and was the copyright consultant for the Clinton administration's advisory council on the National Information Infrastructure from 1994–5.
In the private sector, Perlmutter was the Vice president of policy and international affairs at the International Federation of the Phonographic Industry, a music industry association representing Recording studio. Prior to that, she was associate general counsel and vice president for intellectual property at WarnerMedia. Prior to her notable roles, she practiced law at the Paul, Weiss law firm in New York where she practiced Commercial law.
As an academic, she is a research fellow of the University of Oxford Intellectual Property Research Centre. From 1990 until 1995, she was a professor of law at the Catholic University of America teaching copyright, trademark, unfair competition, and international intellectual property law. Aside from academic journals articles and government reports, Perlmutter is the coauthor of a leading law school casebook on international intellectual property law and policy.
Both in public lecture and in her academic writing, Perlmutter says the American people desire copyright laws that make sense, are fair, and reflect technology currently in use. She argues that the failure of law to adapt quickly to technological change causes disruption to trade, inefficiencies, among other negative effects.
Perlmutter and her two siblings, Tova and Saul, were raised in the Mount Airy neighborhood of Philadelphia and educated at Quakers schools. Her brother, Saul Perlmutter, received the Nobel Prize in physics along with two others in 2011 for their discovery that that the universe's expansion is accelerating.
Perlmutter is a graduate of Harvard University, which awarded her an A.B. degree in linguistics. She earned her Juris Doctor degree from the University of Pennsylvania Law School.
Perlmutter sued to dispute the legality of the dismissal, as the register is appointed by, and responsible to, the librarian of Congress.Smith, Dylan, Fired Copyright Office Head Shira Perlmutter Sues Trump Administration Over ‘Blatantly Unlawful’ Dismissal, Digital Music News, May 23, 2025
Congressman Joseph Morelle criticized the firing, speculating that Perlmutter was fired because "she refused to rubber-stamp Elon Musk's efforts to mine troves of copyright works to train AI models". Other members of Congress, both Republican and Democratic, have pushed back at the Trump administration about its authority to take control of Congress' establishments.
Earlier in the same week as the Perlmutter dismissal, the official who appointed Perlmutter to the office within the library, Librarian of Congress Carla Hayden, had been fired abruptly and without explanation by Trump,Italie, Hillel, Firing, hiring and a mystery: The 225-year-old Library of Congress has never had a moment like this, The Associated Press, May 15, 2025 drawing similar criticism. , new personnel for both positions have not been nominated. The Perlmutter lawsuit followed soon thereafter.
On September 10, 2025, a divided three-judge panel of the United States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit ruled that Perlmutter is entitled to continue to serve as the register of copyrights at the Library of Congress, despite the White House's claim that Trump had fired her, "because Perlmutter leads an agency that is housed in the Legislative Branch and her primary role is to advise Congress."
On November 26, 2025, the Supreme Court formally deferred ruling on the Trump administration's request that this decision be stayed, thus allowing Perlmutter to remain serving. The decision on the stay was deferred until the Supreme Court decides the cases regarding the firings of Lisa Cook from the Federal Reserve and Rebecca Slaughter from the Federal Trade Commission.
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