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AI companies like Anthropic and OpenAI only need to pay for cheap sources of copyrighted work to train their models, per a new legal ruling ...
Two federal judges in the same courthouse came to different opinions on whether AI firms are breaching copyrights, signaling ...
Meta successfully defended against a copyright infringement lawsuit, as a judge ruled authors didn't prove Meta's AI training ...
Like all other creative sectors, the music industry has faced a slew of AI content in recent years, but musicians are ...
Attorneys for OpenAI Inc., Microsoft Corp., and a slate of news organizations and authors suing them for copyright ...
Anthropic told the court that it made fair use of the books and that U.S. copyright law “not only allows, but encourages” its ...
U.S. District Judge Vince Chhabria found that 13 authors who sued Meta “made the wrong arguments.” But the judge also said ...
The advent of generative AI brings to the forefront many novel and complex legal questions related to fair use and copyright infringement. Historically, assessing whether a particular use qualifies as ...
In an order that partly grants Meta's motion for summary judgment, judge Vince Chhabria confirmed that Meta and the authors ...
A federal judge let Meta off the hook for the use of books to train its artificial intelligence model, but it still might ...
Ultimately, because authors introduced no evidence that Meta's AI threatened to dilute their markets, Chhabria ruled that Meta did enough to overcome authors' other arguments regarding alleged harms ...
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