
US judge: AI training on books is fair use, partly
District Court Judge William Alsup ruled on Monday that the company's training of its Claude AI models with books bought or pirated was allowed under the 'fair use' doctrine in the US Copyright Act.
'Use of the books at issue to train Claude and its precursors was exceedingly transformative and was a fair use,' Alsup wrote in his decision.
'The technology at issue was among the most transformative many of us will see in our lifetimes,' Alsup added in his 32-page decision, comparing AI training to how humans learn by reading books.
Tremendous amounts of data are needed to train large language models powering generative AI.
Musicians, book authors, visual artists and news publications have sued various AI companies that used their data without permission or payment.
AI companies generally defend their practices by claiming fair use, arguing that training AI on large datasets fundamentally transforms the original content and is necessary for innovation.
'We are pleased that the court recognized that using 'works to train LLMs was transformative,'' an Anthropic spokesperson said in response to an AFP query.
The judge's decision is 'consistent with copyright's purpose in enabling creativity and fostering scientific progress,' the spokesperson added.
- Blanket protection rejected -
The ruling stems from a class-action lawsuit filed by authors Andrea Bartz, Charles Graeber, and Kirk Wallace Johnson, who accused Anthropic of illegally copying their books to train Claude, the company's AI chatbot that rivals ChatGPT.
However, Alsup rejected Anthropic's bid for blanket protection, ruling that the company's practice of downloading millions of pirated books to build a permanent digital library was not justified by fair use protections.
Along with downloading books from websites offering pirated works, Anthropic bought copyrighted books, scanned the pages and stored them in digital formats, according to court documents.
Anthropic's aim was to amass a library of 'all the books in the world' for training AI models on content as deemed fit, the judge said in his ruling.
While training AI models on the pirated content posed no legal violation, downloading pirated copies to build a general-purpose library constituted copyright infringement, the judge ruled, regardless of eventual training use.
The case will now proceed to trial on damages related to the pirated library copies, with potential penalties including financial damages.
Anthropic said it disagreed with going to trial on this part of the decision and was evaluating its legal options.
'Judge Alsup's decision is a mixed bag,' said Keith Kupferschmid, chief executive of US nonprofit Copyright Alliance.
'In some instances AI companies should be happy with the decision and in other instances copyright owners should be happy.'
Valued at $61.5 billion and heavily backed by Amazon, Anthropic was founded in 2021 by former OpenAI executives.
The company, known for its Claude chatbot and AI models, positions itself as focused on AI safety and responsible development.
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