• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar
  • Skip to footer
  • Over mij
  • Secondary Navigation Social Media Icons

    • Email
    • Facebook
    • Instagram
    • Pinterest
AYNI

AYNI

Stay Informed

  • Landing Page
  • Over mij
  • Gutenberg Blocks
  • Landing Page

Meta refutes claims of copyright infringement in AI training

20.09.23 | | No Comments

In a lawsuit against Sarah Silverman and other authors, Meta claims its AI system does not create copyright-infringing material.

Meta has refuted claims that its artificial intelligence (AI) model Llama was trained using copyrighted material from popular books.

In court on Sept. 18, Meta asked a San Francisco federal judge to dismiss claims made by author Sarah Silverman and a host of other authors who have said it violated the copyrights of their books in the training of its AI system.

The Facebook and Instagram parent company called the use of materials to train its systems “transformative” and “fair use.”

“Use of texts to train LLaMA to statistically model language and generate original expression is transformative by nature and quintessential fair use…”

It continued by pointing out a conclusion in another related court battle, “much like Google’s wholesale copying of books to create an internet search tool was found to be fair use in Authors Guild v. Google, Inc., 804 F.3d 202 (2d Cir. 2015).” 

Meta said the “core issue” of copyright fair use should be taken up again on “another day, on a more fulsome record.” The company said the plaintiff couldn’t provide explanations of the “information” they’re referring to, nor could they provide specific outputs related to their material.

The attorneys of the authors said in a separate statement on Sept. 19 that they are “confident” their claims will be held and will continue to proceed through “discovery and trial.”

OpenAI also attempted to dismiss parts of the claims back in August under similar grounds to what Meta is currently proposing. 

Related: What is fair use? US Supreme Court weighs in on AI’s copyright dilemma

The original lawsuit against Meta and OpenAI was opened in July and was one of many lawsuits popping up against Big Tech giants over copyright and data infringement with the rise of AI.

On Sept. 5, a pair of unnamed engineers opened a class-action lawsuit against OpenAI and Microsoft regarding their alleged scraping methods to obtain private data while training their respective AI models.

In July, Google was sued on similar grounds after it updated its privacy policy. The lawsuit accused the company of misusing large amounts of data, including copyrighted material, in its own AI training.

Magazine: AI Eye: Real uses for AI in crypto, Google’s GPT-4 rival, AI edge for bad employees

Read More from Savannah Fortis on cointelegraph.com
← Previous Post
Bitcoin price eyes $28K as Binance legal battle spurs bullish momentum
Next Post →
Binance CEO refutes report on $250M loan to BAM Management

About

Primary Sidebar

Hey, it's me!


Add content about you in this widget.

Find us online

  • Email
  • Facebook
  • Instagram
  • Pinterest

Join our list

Footer

Buy Isla

Does Isla look like the perfect theme for you? No need to wait! You can get it on the Code + Coconut website right away!

Buy Isla

Join our list

You'll get access to our sales + get a list of our fave products.

  • Email
  • Facebook
  • Instagram
  • Pinterest

Copyright © 2025 · Your Site Name

Isla Theme by Code + Coconut