The anthropier agrees to pay $ 1.5 billion from the United States to settle the group’s collective lawsuit to train artificial intelligence star-news.press/wp
On Friday, Anthropor told the Anthropor Judge Federationco on Friday that it had agreed to pay 1.5 billion dollars from the United States to settle a collective lawsuit from a group of authors who accused the artificial intelligence company of using pirate copies of their books to train AI Chatbot, Claude, without permission.
Anthropor and the plaintiffs in the court file asked the provincial judge, William Aust, approved the settlement, after the announcement of the agreement in August without revealing the conditions or amount.
The plaintiffs said: “If it is approved, then this historical settlement will be the largest recovery of copyright and reported in history, greater than any other copyright of the class or any issue of applying copyright advanced for the final judgment.”
The proposed deal is the first settlement in a series of lawsuits against technology companies including Openai, Microsoft and Meta platforms for their use of copyright -protected materials to train artificial intelligence systems.
As part of the settlement, Anthropor said it would destroy copies downloaded from the books obtained through the Libgen and Pilimi (Mirror Pirate Library) sites. Under the deal, it can still face violations of the materials produced by the company’s artificial intelligence models.
In a statement, Anthropor said that the company “is committed to developing safe systems of artificial intelligence that helps people and organizations extend their capabilities, enhance scientific discovery, and solve complex problems.” The agreement does not include acceptance of responsibility.
“This historic settlement is a vital step in admitting that artificial intelligence companies statement.
“These rich companies have been stolen to a large amount of billions of dollars from those who get a average income of barely $ 20,000 (the United States) per year. This settlement sends a clear message that artificial intelligence companies must pay the price of books that they use exactly as they pay for other basic components of their LLMS.”
Although an estimated seven million books were downloaded by Antarbur from piracy sites, according to the authors, only about 500,000 works are covered in the collective lawsuit, which means that the settlement reaches about 3000 USD per author.
The book Andrea Partz and Charles Gray, Kirk Wallace Johnson submitted the collective lawsuit against Antarbur last year. They argued that the company, which is supported by Amazon and the alphabet, used millions of pirated books illegally to teach its assistant in artificial intelligence to respond to human claims.
Creative work stole
The writers have repeated dozens of other lawsuits filed by the authors, news outlets, visual artists and others who say that technology companies have stolen their work to use them in training artificial intelligence.
Companies have argued that their systems use copyright -protected materials to create new transformational content.
Alsup spent in June that Antarubor used books to train Claude, but found that the company had violated its rights by providing more than seven million pirated books to a “central library” that would not necessarily be used for this purpose.
Vancouver’s best -selling author fired a lawsuit against NVIDIA, Meta and two technology giants. JB Mackinnon claims that the books he wrote and other Canadian authors were illegally used to train artificial intelligence models.
The trial was scheduled to start in December to determine the amount due to the anthropologist for the alleged piracy, with possible damage ranging in hundreds of billions of dollars.
The central question of fair use is still discussed in other publishing rights cases of artificial intelligence.
Vancouver JB Mackinnon recently launched legal lawsuits against NVIDIA, Meta, Nomsa and Databricks Inc.
Another ruling in San Francisco hears a similar lawsuit against Mita, which was sentenced after Alsup’s decision that the use of copyrights protected without permission to train artificial intelligence will be illegal in “many circumstances”.
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2025-09-05 21:55:00