
Judge dismisses authors copyright lawsuit against Meta over AI training
A federal judge on Wednesday sided with Facebook parent Meta Platforms in dismissing a copyright infringement lawsuit from a group of authors who accused the company of stealing their works to train its artificial intelligence technology.
The ruling from U.S. District Judge Vince Chhabri was the second in a week from San Francisco's federal court to dismiss major copyright claims from book authors against the rapidly developing AI industry.
Chhabri found that 13 authors who sued Meta 'made the wrong arguments' and tossed the case. But the judge also said that the ruling is limited to the authors in the case and does not mean that Meta's use of copyrighted materials is lawful.
Lawyers for the plaintiffs — a group of well-known writers that includes comedian Sarah Silverman and authors Jacqueline Woodson and Ta-Nehisi Coates — didn't immediately respond to a request for comment Wednesday. Meta also didn't immediately respond to a request for comment.
'This ruling does not stand for the proposition that Meta's use of copyrighted materials to train its language models is lawful,' Chhabri wrote. '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.'
On Monday, from the same courthouse, U.S. District Judge William Alsup ruled that AI company Anthropic didn't break the law by training its chatbot Claude on millions of copyrighted books, but the company must still go to trial for illicitly acquiring those books from pirate websites instead of buying them.
But the actual process of an AI system distilling from thousands of written works to be able to produce its own passages of text qualified as 'fair use' under U.S. copyright law because it was 'quintessentially transformative,' Alsup wrote.
Chhabria, in his Meta ruling, criticized Alsup's reasoning on the Anthropic case, arguing that 'Alsup focused heavily on the transformative nature of generative AI while brushing aside concerns about the harm it can inflict on the market for the works it gets trained on.'
Chhabria suggested that a case for such harm can be made.
In the Meta case, the authors had argued in court filings that Meta is 'liable for massive copyright infringement' by taking their books from online repositories of pirated works and feeding them into Meta's flagship generative AI system Llama.
Lengthy and distinctively written passages of text — such as those found in books — are highly useful for teaching generative AI chatbots the patterns of human language. 'Meta could and should have paid' to buy and license those literary works, the authors' attorneys argued.
Meta countered in court filings that U.S. copyright law 'allows the unauthorized copying of a work to transform it into something new' and that the new, AI-generated expression that comes out of its chatbots is fundamentally different from the books it was trained on.
"After nearly two years of litigation, there still is no evidence that anyone has ever used Llama as a substitute for reading Plaintiffs' books, or that they even could,' Meta's attorneys argued.
Meta says Llama won't output the actual works it has copied, even when asked to do so.
'No one can use Llama to read Sarah Silverman's description of her childhood, or Junot Diaz's story of a Dominican boy growing up in New Jersey,' its attorneys wrote.
Accused of pulling those books from online 'shadow libraries," Meta has also argued that the methods it used have 'no bearing on the nature and purpose of its use' and it would have been the same result if the company instead struck a deal with real libraries.
Such deals are how Google built its online Google Books repository of more than 20 million books, though it also fought a decade of legal challenges before the U.S. Supreme Court in 2016 let stand lower court rulings that rejected copyright infringement claims.
The authors' case against Meta forced CEO Mark Zuckerberg to be deposed, and has disclosed internal conversations at the company over the ethics of tapping into pirated databases that have long attracted scrutiny.
'Authorities regularly shut down their domains and even prosecute the perpetrators,' the authors' attorneys argued in a court filing. "That Meta knew taking copyrighted works from pirated databases could expose the company to enormous risk is beyond dispute: it triggered an escalation to Mark Zuckerberg and other Meta executives for approval. Their gamble should not pay off.'
"Whatever the merits of generative artificial intelligence, or GenAI, stealing copyrighted works off the Internet for one's own benefit has always been unlawful,' they argued.
The named plaintiffs are Jacqueline Woodson, Richard Kadrey, Andrew Sean Greer, Rachel Louise Snyder, David Henry Hwang, Ta-Nehisi Coates, Laura Lippman, Matthew Klam, Junot Diaz, Sarah Silverman, Lysa TerKeurst, Christopher Golden and Christopher Farnsworth.
Most of the plaintiffs had asked Chhabria to rule now, rather than wait for a jury trial, on the basic claim of whether Meta infringed on their copyrights. Two of the plaintiffs, Ta-Nehisi Coates and Christopher Golden, did not seek such summary judgment.
Chhabri said in the ruling that while he had 'no choice' but to grant Meta's summary judgment tossing the case, 'in the grand scheme of things, the consequences of this ruling are limited. This is not a class action, so the ruling only affects the rights of these 13 authors -- not the countless others whose works Meta used to train its models.'

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Indian Express
32 minutes ago
- Indian Express
From the US to Japan, stablecoins are causing a global financial rewrite
Written by Sanhita Chauriha When Facebook (now Meta) launched its ill-fated stablecoin project, Libra, in 2019, central banks dismissed it as a corporate fantasy. Fast-forward to 2025. The same monetary authorities are now crafting legal blueprints for what is shaping up to be the next great leap in financial infrastructure: The regulation and integration of stablecoins. These cryptoassets, pegged to fiat currencies and often backed by real-world reserves, are no longer just liquidity tools for crypto traders. They are becoming foundational rails for payments, settlement, and programmable money. But as stablecoins inch closer to mass adoption, governments across the world are grappling with a new policy trilemma: How to encourage innovation, maintain financial stability, and preserve monetary sovereignty. The US, in a rare bipartisan feat, passed the GENIUS Act, a sweeping federal bill designed to regulate fiat-backed stablecoins. Under its provisions, stablecoins must be backed 1:1 by high-quality liquid assets (HQLA), be redeemable on demand, and be subject to monthly reserve disclosures and anti-money laundering checks. Issuers over $10 billion in circulation are now federally overseen, while smaller ones can operate under state charters, provided those states meet minimum national standards. In effect, the US is laying the groundwork for a tokenised digital dollar, while retaining oversight through traditional financial plumbing. Critics argue the GENIUS Act is a Trojan horse for financial incumbents. The law requires issuers to either be licensed financial institutions or partner with one effectively handling regulatory advantage to major banks. Unsurprisingly, Bank of America's CEO Brian Moynihan recently announced the bank is ready to issue its own stablecoin, following moves by JPMorgan (JPM Coin) and PayPal (PYUSD). If this trend continues, Wall Street may soon displace the DeFi startups that once pioneered this space. Nonetheless, such institutional entry brings maturity, deeper liquidity, and integration with the broader economic traits necessary for stablecoins to scale beyond crypto-native applications. Europe has taken a more technocratic path. The Markets in Crypto-Assets (MiCA) regulation, to be enforced from late 2024, classifies stablecoins as either 'e-money tokens' or 'asset-referenced tokens.' Stablecoin issuers must meet capital requirements, submit whitepapers, disclose reserve asset composition, and adhere to redemption guarantees. 'Significant' stablecoins that with large circulation or systemic reach will face direct oversight by the European Banking Authority and may be barred from excessive transaction volumes. MiCA aims to future-proof the euro's digital periphery while preventing stablecoins from competing directly with sovereign currency, a concern central banks share across continents. The United Kingdom, post-Brexit, is scripting its own stablecoin strategy with a regulatory regime that will place fiat-backed stablecoins under the supervision of the Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) and the Bank of England. Interestingly, the UK proposes to exempt overseas issuers from full domestic compliance if their home jurisdictions maintain equivalent safeguards. This open-but-cautious model aims to position London as a magnet for global crypto-finance, without abandoning core prudential standards. In Asia, innovation is swift but cautious. Singapore's Monetary Authority (MAS) has finalised a comprehensive regulatory framework for stablecoins pegged to the Singapore dollar or any G10 currency. Issuers must ensure full reserve backing, fast redemption (within five business days), and high transparency. Only those who meet the MAS's standards may market their coins as 'MAS-regulated', a label likely to become a global credibility mark. Meanwhile, Hong Kong has also passed stablecoin legislation, effective by 2025, limiting issuance to licensed financial institutions. Already, major fintech players like Ant Group are applying for licenses, eager to gain early-mover status in the city's evolving digital asset ecosystem. Japan stands apart with perhaps the strictest regime: Only banks, fund-transfer firms, or trust companies can issue yen-pegged stablecoins. Amendments to the Payment Services Act in 2022 tightly regulate redemption, disclosure, and asset segregation, favouring stability over growth. While the market is small, Japan's emphasis on consumer protection and conservative financial norms reflects a broader regional wariness toward crypto's more volatile edges. Meanwhile, the United Arab Emirates has emerged as the Gulf's most aggressive regulator of stablecoins. Its Virtual Assets Regulatory Authority (VARA) and the UAE central bank have mandated 1:1 reserve backing, monthly third-party audits, and strict anti-money laundering/combating the financing of terrorism (AML/CFT) protocols. Dubai, in particular, is branding itself as a digital finance hub. Its approach mirrors Singapore's in one key way: Credibility must be earned, not assumed. What unites these regulatory initiatives despite differing geographies and philosophies is a growing consensus that stablecoins are no longer hypothetical. Their programmable nature makes them attractive for everything from cross-border settlements and tokenised trade finance to retail micropayments. The Bank for International Settlements, in its April 2024 paper, warned that more than 600 de-pegging events occurred in 2023, underscoring their fragility. Yet it also acknowledged that, with proper regulation, stablecoins could serve as complements to Central Bank Digital Currencies (CBDCs), not threats. The stablecoin race is not merely a question of financial regulation. It is one of economic statecraft. The US sees it as a lever to maintain dollar dominance in a multipolar world. Europe views it as a way to secure financial autonomy in the age of digital platforms. Asia, meanwhile, seeks to modernise without destabilising. And the Gulf hopes to leapfrog into fintech relevance. In short, stablecoins are forcing countries to rethink not just how money moves but who moves it, who regulates it, and to whom it ultimately belongs. The writer is a technology lawyer. Views are personal


India.com
33 minutes ago
- India.com
Airtel's AI Fraud Detection System: Did You Know How Many Users Are Safeguarded In Delhi-NCR?
New Delhi: Bharti Airtel on Thursday announced that its AI-powered fraud detection system has successfully safeguarded more than 3.5 million users across the Delhi-NCR from rising online frauds. The feat was achieved within just 43 days of launching the advanced fraud detection system nationwide, Airtel said. 'In the last 43 days of the launch, Airtel has blocked more than 188,000 malicious links and shielded 106 million users across the country,' the company said. The advanced system, which is automatically enabled for all Airtel mobile and broadband customers, scans and filters links across SMS, WhatsApp, Telegram, Facebook, Instagram, e-mail, and other browsers. It leverages real-time threat intelligence to examine over 1 billion URLs daily and blocks access to harmful sites in under 100 milliseconds. 'At Airtel, we are dedicated to protecting our customers from various types of fraud. By incorporating our network with an AI-driven fraud detection solution, we guarantee that our customers are protected from all new threats without requiring any action on their part,' said Nidhi Lauria, CEO – Delhi-NCR and Uttar Pradesh (West), Bharti Airtel, in a statement. 'We consider it crucial to act now to secure the digital environment of tomorrow, and we take pride in being at the forefront of this initiative by providing a safer and more comprehensive network for our customers in Delhi-NCR,' Lauria added. With Delhi-NCR ranked as one of India's most digitally advanced states, the threat of online fraud has grown. Fraudsters increasingly target users through phishing links, fake deliveries, and spurious banking alerts. The system can potentially scan links provided in suspicious messages and flag them, as well as block access. The real-time interception acts as a digital shield, protecting families, senior citizens, homemakers, students, and first-time smartphone users alike, from falling victim to all kinds of frauds, the company said. The AI-driven platform also delivers fraud warnings in the user's preferred language, including Hindi, making it highly effective for a diverse population. The solution operates silently in the background, requires no installation, and is offered free of cost, the company said.


Time of India
35 minutes ago
- Time of India
US embassy in India: 'Removing ….. on your application could lead to visa denial and ineligibility for further US visas'
The US Embassy in India has issued a clear warning for visa applicants. 'Omitting social media information could lead to visa denial and ineligibility for future visas,' the embassy said in a post on microblogging site X (formerly Twitter). The post reminded visa applicants to disclose all social media usernames or handles they've used over the past five years while filling out the DS-160 visa application form. 'Visa applicants are required to list all social media usernames or handles of every platform they have used from the last 5 years on the DS-160 visa application form' the post read. 'Applicants certify that the information in their visa application is true and correct before they sign and submit.' The requirement is part of broader vetting procedures introduced by the US State Department in recent years. Under the updated rules, applicants must list IDs used on platforms such as Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, LinkedIn, YouTube, and others—even if the accounts are no longer active from the last five years. New rule for F, M, and J non-immigrant visa applicants This comes days after the US government issued a new guideline for those applying for student and exchange visitor visas. Applicable to all applicants of F, M, and J non-immigrant visas, the new rule requires these applicants to set their social media accounts to public. 'Effective immediately, all individuals applying for an F, M, or J nonimmigrant visa are requested to adjust the privacy settings on all of their social media accounts to public to facilitate vetting necessary to establish their identity and admissibility to the United States under U.S. law," the US embassy in India wrote in an X post. F, M and J visas are the common types of non-immigrant visas issued by the agency to foreign nationals who wish to study or participate in exchange visitor programs in the U.S. F visa is typically used by academic students, the M visa by vocational students, and the J visa by exchange visitors, including researchers, scholars, and interns. AI Masterclass for Students. Upskill Young Ones Today!– Join Now