Meta and Mark Zuckerberg Sued by Authors and Publishers Over AI Copyright Claims

Meta and Mark Zuckerberg Sued by Authors and Publishers Over AI Copyright Claims
1 min readTechnologyLegalBusiness

The lawsuit raises questions about how generative AI models use copyrighted materials and the legal boundaries of such practices.

  • Five major publishing houses and author Scott Turow have filed a lawsuit against Meta and CEO Mark Zuckerberg.
  • The class-action lawsuit alleges copyright infringement related to Meta's use of authors’ works.
  • The suit claims Meta trained its Llama generative AI models on millions of copyrighted materials.
  • Scott Turow is a named plaintiff in the case, according to NPR News.
  • The lawsuit specifically names Mark Zuckerberg as a defendant.

A group of publishers and author Scott Turow filed a class-action lawsuit against Meta and Mark Zuckerberg, alleging that Meta's AI models were trained on copyrighted books without permission.

This case could set legal precedents for how AI companies use copyrighted content in training datasets and impact future AI development and copyright law.

The legal process will determine whether Meta's AI training practices violated copyright laws. Further court filings and responses from Meta are expected.

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