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WASHINGTON: American comedian Sarah Silverman and two other authors have sued Open AI for copyright infringement in the latest opposition by creators since the company released chat Taking the world by storm.
Prosecutors accuse the San Francisco company of using their business to train their own artificial intelligence models without permission, adding to a series of issues that may complicate the development of the tech world’s biggest new trend.
The trio also sued Facebook’s parent company Meta, whose lesser-known open-source models also used pirated downloads of their books for training purposes, the suit alleged.
Much of the training material used by OpenAI and Meta “comes from copyrighted works — including books written by plaintiffs — that were copied by OpenAI and Meta without consent, without credit, and without compensation,” the trio’s attorneys said in a blog post. mail.
In both lawsuits, which were filed Friday in a California court, the authors accuse the technology companies of using their books to train their artificial intelligence models and allege a series of copyright violations.
If successful, these types of cases would transform the way technology is developed, limiting the way tech giants can build their models and produce compelling human-like content.
Plaintiffs in a barrage of recent cases include source code owners v. OpenAI and Microsoft GitHub, visual artists, as well as photo agency Getty v. Stability AI.
San Francisco attorneys Joseph Savery and Matthew Patrick are behind other such lawsuits and have filed the latest on behalf of Silverman and authors Christopher Golden and Richard Cadre.
The lawsuit cited Silverman’s 2010 best-selling memoir “The Bedwetter,” Golden’s horror novel “Ararat” and Kadrey’s Sandman Slim supernatural series.
Silverman is known in the United States for his controversial and often controversial sense of humor as well as being outspoken on social and political issues.
Against OpenAI, the plaintiffs say they “did not consent to their copyrighted books being used as ChatGPT training materials. However, their copyrighted materials were ingested and used to train ChatGPT.”
The authors presented exhibits in the lawsuit that gave detailed summaries of their work from ChatGPT.
Against Meta, the trio says the company turned to an illegally created “shadow library” to build LLaMA models for the company that included their work.
These libraries use pirated torrent downloads to illegally publish copyrighted works.
OpenAI declined to comment on the lawsuit, while Meta did not immediately respond to requests for comment.
Prosecutors accuse the San Francisco company of using their business to train their own artificial intelligence models without permission, adding to a series of issues that may complicate the development of the tech world’s biggest new trend.
The trio also sued Facebook’s parent company Meta, whose lesser-known open-source models also used pirated downloads of their books for training purposes, the suit alleged.
Much of the training material used by OpenAI and Meta “comes from copyrighted works — including books written by plaintiffs — that were copied by OpenAI and Meta without consent, without credit, and without compensation,” the trio’s attorneys said in a blog post. mail.
In both lawsuits, which were filed Friday in a California court, the authors accuse the technology companies of using their books to train their artificial intelligence models and allege a series of copyright violations.
If successful, these types of cases would transform the way technology is developed, limiting the way tech giants can build their models and produce compelling human-like content.
Plaintiffs in a barrage of recent cases include source code owners v. OpenAI and Microsoft GitHub, visual artists, as well as photo agency Getty v. Stability AI.
San Francisco attorneys Joseph Savery and Matthew Patrick are behind other such lawsuits and have filed the latest on behalf of Silverman and authors Christopher Golden and Richard Cadre.
The lawsuit cited Silverman’s 2010 best-selling memoir “The Bedwetter,” Golden’s horror novel “Ararat” and Kadrey’s Sandman Slim supernatural series.
Silverman is known in the United States for his controversial and often controversial sense of humor as well as being outspoken on social and political issues.
Against OpenAI, the plaintiffs say they “did not consent to their copyrighted books being used as ChatGPT training materials. However, their copyrighted materials were ingested and used to train ChatGPT.”
The authors presented exhibits in the lawsuit that gave detailed summaries of their work from ChatGPT.
Against Meta, the trio says the company turned to an illegally created “shadow library” to build LLaMA models for the company that included their work.
These libraries use pirated torrent downloads to illegally publish copyrighted works.
OpenAI declined to comment on the lawsuit, while Meta did not immediately respond to requests for comment.
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