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Meta fends off authors' US copyright lawsuit over AI

Meta fends off authors' US copyright lawsuit over AI

Ammon8 hours ago

Ammon News - A federal judge ruled on Wednesday for Meta Platforms against a group of authors who had argued that its use of their books without permission to train its artificial intelligence system infringed their copyrights.
U.S. District Judge Vince Chhabria, in San Francisco, said in his decision, opens new tab that the authors had not presented enough evidence that Meta's AI would dilute the market for their work to show that the company's conduct was illegal under U.S. copyright law.
Chhabria also said, however, that using copyrighted work without permission to train AI would be unlawful in "many circumstances," splitting with another federal judge in San Francisco who found on Monday in a separate lawsuit that Anthropic's AI training made "fair use" of copyrighted materials.
"This ruling does not stand for the proposition that Meta's use of copyrighted materials to train its language models is lawful," Chhabria said. "It stands only for the proposition that these plaintiffs made the wrong arguments and failed to develop a record in support of the right one."
A spokesperson for the authors' law firm Boies Schiller Flexner said that it disagreed with the judge's decision to rule for Meta despite the "undisputed record" of the company's "historically unprecedented pirating of copyrighted works."
A Meta spokesperson said the company appreciated the decision and called fair use a "vital legal framework" for building "transformative" AI technology.
The authors sued Meta in 2023, arguing the company misused pirated versions of their books to train its AI system Llama without permission or compensation.

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Meta fends off authors' US copyright lawsuit over AI
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Meta fends off authors' US copyright lawsuit over AI

Ammon News - A federal judge ruled on Wednesday for Meta Platforms against a group of authors who had argued that its use of their books without permission to train its artificial intelligence system infringed their copyrights. U.S. District Judge Vince Chhabria, in San Francisco, said in his decision, opens new tab that the authors had not presented enough evidence that Meta's AI would dilute the market for their work to show that the company's conduct was illegal under U.S. copyright law. Chhabria also said, however, that using copyrighted work without permission to train AI would be unlawful in "many circumstances," splitting with another federal judge in San Francisco who found on Monday in a separate lawsuit that Anthropic's AI training made "fair use" of copyrighted materials. "This ruling does not stand for the proposition that Meta's use of copyrighted materials to train its language models is lawful," Chhabria said. "It stands only for the proposition that these plaintiffs made the wrong arguments and failed to develop a record in support of the right one." A spokesperson for the authors' law firm Boies Schiller Flexner said that it disagreed with the judge's decision to rule for Meta despite the "undisputed record" of the company's "historically unprecedented pirating of copyrighted works." A Meta spokesperson said the company appreciated the decision and called fair use a "vital legal framework" for building "transformative" AI technology. The authors sued Meta in 2023, arguing the company misused pirated versions of their books to train its AI system Llama without permission or compensation.

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