Back

Meta and Zuckerberg Sued for Massive Copyright Infringement in AI Training

Severity: Medium (Score: 48.9)

Sources: News.Ycombinator, Rss.Slashdot

Summary

Five major publishers and author Scott Turow have filed a lawsuit against Meta and CEO Mark Zuckerberg, alleging that they illegally used millions of copyrighted works to train the Llama AI system. The lawsuit claims Zuckerberg 'personally authorized and actively encouraged' the infringement by using pirated books and journal articles. The plaintiffs argue that Meta's actions violate copyright law and fall outside fair use protections. They seek unspecified monetary damages in this class-action suit filed in the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of New York. Meta has denied wrongdoing and plans to contest the lawsuit, citing previous court rulings on AI training and fair use. The case highlights the ongoing conflict between the publishing industry and AI developers over copyright issues. Key Points: • Meta and Zuckerberg face a class-action lawsuit for copyright infringement involving AI training. • The lawsuit claims millions of copyrighted works were illegally used without permission. • Meta asserts that its use of copyrighted material may qualify as fair use under existing laws.

Key Entities

Loading threat details...

Threat Not Found

The threat cluster you're looking for doesn't exist or has been removed.

Return to Feed