US Authors Prepare Class-Action Lawsuit Against Anthropic Over AI Book Piracy

TL;DR Summary
A California federal judge has allowed a class-action lawsuit against Anthropic, alleging the AI company downloaded up to seven million copyrighted books from pirated sources to train its chatbot Claude, violating the Copyright Act. The lawsuit, filed by authors including Andrea Bartz, Charles Graeber, and Kirk Wallace Johnson, joins a broader trend of legal actions against AI firms over copyright issues, with some cases focusing on unauthorized data use and others on licensing disputes.
Topics:business#ai-training-data#anthropic#class-action-lawsuit#copyright-infringement#legal#pirated-works
- Anthropic will face a class-action lawsuit from US authors The Verge
- US authors suing Anthropic can band together in copyright class action, judge rules Reuters
- Judges Don’t Know What AI’s Book Piracy Means The Atlantic
- Senator slams Big Tech's role in 'pirating' copyrighted books for AI training purposes Fox Business
- Hawley teases bipartisan AI bills Punchbowl News
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