Sarah Silverman sues OpenAI and Meta
- Published
US comedian Sarah Silverman is suing ChatGPT maker OpenAI and technology giant Meta, alleging that her copyright has been infringed in the training of the firms' AI systems.
Systems like ChatGPT learn to imitate human language by analysing large datasets of human text.
Meta declined to comment. OpenAI has not yet replied to ´óÏó´«Ã½ questions.
Two other authors in addition to Ms Silverman are bringing the class-action case.
The case against OpenAI alleges that without the authors' consent "their copyrighted materials were ingested and used to train ChatGPT".
The case against Meta, which owns Facebook and Instagram, concerns its . Initially released to a small group of users primarily working on research, the system was subsequently leaked online.
LLaMa is a "foundational large language model" designed to help AI research. In other words it's a very big AI system that can be put to use in a range of tasks.
The authors claim their books appear in a dataset, compiled by another organisation, which was used to train the LLaMa system.
Patrick Goold a reader in law at City University in London told the ´óÏó´«Ã½ it was likely both cases would come down to whether training a large language model is a form of fair-use or not.
The lawyers assisting the group, Matthew Butterick and Joseph Saveri, are already involved in an earlier case against OpenAI brought by two authors.
They that "since the release of OpenAI's ChatÂGPT sysÂtem in March 2023, we've been hearÂing from writÂers, authors, and pubÂlishÂers who are conÂcerned about its uncanny abilÂity to genÂerÂate text simÂiÂlar to that found in copyÂrighted texÂtual mateÂriÂals, includÂing thouÂsands of books".
But other legal experts whether OpenAI can be said to have copied books.
Last year the law firm launched two cases, one on behalf of programmers and another on behalf of artists, who believe their rights have been infringed by AI systems.
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- Published18 January 2023