Sarah Silverman and Other Authors , Sue Maker of ChatGPT for Copyright Infringement.
Sarah Silverman and Other Authors , Sue Maker of ChatGPT for Copyright Infringement.
Silverman has joined two class-action lawsuits against ChatGPT creator OpenAI and Meta, creator of AI chatbot LLaMA.
Silverman has joined two class-action lawsuits against ChatGPT creator OpenAI and Meta, creator of AI chatbot LLaMA.
Silverman has joined two class-action lawsuits against ChatGPT creator OpenAI and Meta, creator of AI chatbot LLaMA.
Authors Richard Kadrey and
Christopher Golden are plaintiffs in
those suits as well, HuffPost reports. .
Silverman alleges that her book,
'The Bedwetter,' was not authorized
for use in training AI models.
The plaintiffs claim that copyright law is violated by ChatGPT since it produces a "derivative" version of their works when instructed to summarize a source. .
In addition to unauthorized use of their works, the authors claim the companies' AI models were trained with content from "shadow libraries" such as Library Genesis and Z-Library, which is "flagrantly illegal." .
Each case reportedly contains
six counts of copyright violations.
The authors demand "statutory damages and restitution of profits," HuffPost reports. .
Their attorneys detailed
AI's impact on their website. .
Since the release of OpenAI’s
ChatGPT system in March 2023,
we’ve been hearing from writers,
authors, and publishers who are concerned about its uncanny ability to generate text similar to that found in copyrighted textual materials, including thousands of books, Attorneys Joseph Saveri and Matthew Butterick, via statement
Sarah Silverman and Other Authors , Sue Maker of ChatGPT for Copyright Infringement.
Silverman has joined two class-action lawsuits against ChatGPT creator OpenAI and Meta, creator of AI chatbot LLaMA.
Silverman has joined two class-action lawsuits against ChatGPT creator OpenAI and Meta, creator of AI chatbot LLaMA.
Silverman has joined two class-action lawsuits against ChatGPT creator OpenAI and Meta, creator of AI chatbot LLaMA.
Authors Richard Kadrey and
Christopher Golden are plaintiffs in
those suits as well, HuffPost reports. .
Silverman alleges that her book,
'The Bedwetter,' was not authorized
for use in training AI models.
The plaintiffs claim that copyright law is violated by ChatGPT since it produces a "derivative" version of their works when instructed to summarize a source. .
In addition to unauthorized use of their works, the authors claim the companies' AI models were trained with content from "shadow libraries" such as Library Genesis and Z-Library, which is "flagrantly illegal." .
Each case reportedly contains
six counts of copyright violations.
The authors demand "statutory damages and restitution of profits," HuffPost reports. .
Their attorneys detailed
AI's impact on their website. .
Since the release of OpenAI’s
ChatGPT system in March 2023,
we’ve been hearing from writers,
authors, and publishers who are concerned about its uncanny ability to generate text similar to that found in copyrighted textual materials, including thousands of books, Attorneys Joseph Saveri and Matthew Butterick, via statement
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