Music Publishers Accuse Anthropic of Pirating 20,000 Songs in $3 Billion Lawsuit
Publishers allege Anthropic used over 20,000 copyrighted songs without licenses to train AI, seeking $3 billion in damages for systematic infringement, court filings show.
10 Articles
10 Articles
A combination of great graphic editors has advanced with a judicial action against the giant artificial intelligence (IA) Anthropic, accusing the company of using undisputably thousands of protected works to train its models...
Music publishers accuse Anthropic of pirating 20,000 songs in $3 billion lawsuit
The complaint, filed January 28 in the US District Court for the Northern District of California, could become one of the largest non-class action copyright cases in US history if damages are awarded as sought.Read Entire Article
Media, chatbot Claude would use lyrics and music of 20 thousand songs (ANSA)
Universal Music Group, Concord Music Group and ABKCO Music brought Anthropic before the Northern California Federal Court for $3 billion. They blame Claude's publisher for using more than 20,000 protected songs to train his models.
Anthropic, the company behind the artificial intelligence Claude, is facing a new legal battle. Specifically, several record labels, including the powerful Universal Music Group, are suing for alleged copyright infringement. According to the lawsuit, Anthropic has unlawfully used the labels' material to power its chatbot... [See article: Record labels file billion-dollar lawsuit against AI provider Anthropic (Claude)]
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