A group of major music publishers, including Concord Music Group and Universal Music Group, are taking tech giant Anthropic to court over allegations of "flagrant piracy". The lawsuit claims that the AI company, which is valued at $350 billion, has been secretly downloading more than 20,000 copyrighted songs, including sheet music, lyrics, and compositions, without permission.
According to the publishers, these stolen works were then used to train Anthropic's chatbot Claude, resulting in the creation of millions of dollars worth of content. The music industry giants have accused Anthropic of misleadingly claiming that it is an "AI safety and research" company, when in reality its business has been built on illicit copyright infringement.
The publishers are seeking damages of over $3 billion, making this one of the largest non-class action copyright cases in US history. This sum is staggering, especially considering that Anthropic's valuation is less than 1% of this amount.
This latest lawsuit is a follow-up to last year's Bartz v. Anthropic case, which resulted in an award of $1.5 billion to impacted writers after it was found that the company had illegally downloaded their published works for training purposes. The terms of that agreement dictated that the 500,000 authors involved would receive $3,000 per work.
However, unlike in the Bartz case, where Anthropic was allowed to train its models on copyrighted content as long as it didn't acquire the content via piracy, this new lawsuit suggests that the company may be liable for acquiring these works through illicit means. It's an odd distinction, given that Anthropic's entire business model appears to rely on snatching up copyrighted content.
The outcome of this latest lawsuit remains to be seen, but it has significant implications for the music industry and the role of AI companies in the creative process.
According to the publishers, these stolen works were then used to train Anthropic's chatbot Claude, resulting in the creation of millions of dollars worth of content. The music industry giants have accused Anthropic of misleadingly claiming that it is an "AI safety and research" company, when in reality its business has been built on illicit copyright infringement.
The publishers are seeking damages of over $3 billion, making this one of the largest non-class action copyright cases in US history. This sum is staggering, especially considering that Anthropic's valuation is less than 1% of this amount.
This latest lawsuit is a follow-up to last year's Bartz v. Anthropic case, which resulted in an award of $1.5 billion to impacted writers after it was found that the company had illegally downloaded their published works for training purposes. The terms of that agreement dictated that the 500,000 authors involved would receive $3,000 per work.
However, unlike in the Bartz case, where Anthropic was allowed to train its models on copyrighted content as long as it didn't acquire the content via piracy, this new lawsuit suggests that the company may be liable for acquiring these works through illicit means. It's an odd distinction, given that Anthropic's entire business model appears to rely on snatching up copyrighted content.
The outcome of this latest lawsuit remains to be seen, but it has significant implications for the music industry and the role of AI companies in the creative process.