AI Copyright Lawsuit: Meta Under Fire for Alleged Piracy

Published On Mon Mar 10 2025
AI Copyright Lawsuit: Meta Under Fire for Alleged Piracy

Meta Faces Trial Over Alleged Use of Pirated Works in AI Training ...

A federal judge has allowed an AI copyright lawsuit against Meta to proceed while dismissing part of it. Authors Richard Kadrey and Sarah Silverman allege that Meta used their books to train Llama AI models and removed copyright information to hide infringement. Meta claims its training is fair use. The judge found sufficient grounds for the authors' claims but dismissed their California CDAFA claims, highlighting Meta's copyright practices amid ongoing litigation.

Legal Proceedings

A federal judge has permitted an AI-related copyright lawsuit against Meta to proceed, despite dismissing part of the case. In the lawsuit, Kadrey vs. Meta, authors Richard Kadrey, Sarah Silverman, and Ta-Nehisi Coates allege that Meta infringed on their intellectual property by using their books to train its Llama AI models. They also claim that Meta removed copyright information from their works to obscure this infringement.

Fair Use: Training Generative AI - Creative Commons

Meta contends that its training practices fall under fair use and argues that the authors lack standing to sue. U.S. District Judge Vince Chhabria expressed skepticism about dismissing the case but criticized the authors' legal teams for their exaggerated rhetoric. In his ruling, Chhabria affirmed that the authors' claims of copyright infringement represent a concrete injury sufficient for standing. He noted that they adequately alleged that Meta intentionally removed copyright management information (CMI) to hide the infringement.

However, the judge dismissed the authors' claims under the California Comprehensive Computer Data Access and Fraud Act (CDAFA), stating that they did not prove Meta accessed their computers or servers, only their data. The lawsuit has revealed insights into Meta's copyright practices, including claims that Mark Zuckerberg authorized the use of copyrighted works for training and discussions among Meta staff regarding the use of questionable content for AI training. Other AI copyright lawsuits, such as The New York Times' case against OpenAI, are also currently under consideration by the courts.

Conclusion

Meta is a Official Source. The source has been verified by Swipe Insight team.
Markifact is a Verified Sponsor. Want to get featured here? Contact us.
Perplexity is a Official Source. The source has been verified by Swipe Insight team.
Google is a Official Source. The source has been verified by Swipe Insight team.
Meta is a Official Source. The source has been verified by Swipe Insight team.
Meta is a Official Source. The source has been verified by Swipe Insight team.
Google is a Official Source. The source has been verified by Swipe Insight team.
Markifact is a Verified Tool. Want to get this badge? Contact us.
Marketing Workflows Powered by AI
Marketing Auditor is a Verified Tool. Want to get this badge? Contact us.
Automated audits for Google Ads and Analytics.

Master List of lawsuits v. AI, ChatGPT, OpenAI, Microsoft, Meta ...

Your daily app for digital marketing insights! Scan QR Code to Download our Mobile App Made with ❤️ by Optimization Up