Lawsuit Alleges Mark Zuckerberg Approved Use of 'Pirated' Books for AI Training
Mark Zuckerberg, CEO of Meta, is named in a lawsuit filed by authors including Sarah Silverman and Ta-Nehisi Coates. The plaintiffs claim that Zuckerberg approved the use of a dataset of pirated books to train the company's artificial intelligence models. The 'LibGen' dataset, which is an online repository of copyright-protected material, is alleged to have been used despite internal warnings about its legality.
Communication records presented in court suggest that Meta's AI team sought approval from Zuckerberg for using this dataset, which could jeopardize the company's negotiations with regulators. The authors argue that Meta unlawfully utilized their works to develop its Llama language model without consent.
The lawsuit, initiated in 2023, claims that such actions infringe on copyright laws and threaten the livelihoods of creative professionals. A previous court decision dismissed other allegations against Meta but allowed the authors to revise their claims. As the legal battle continues, the case highlights ongoing concerns regarding copyright use in AI development.
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