latentbrief
Back to news
General3h ago

Google Sued for Copyright Infringement Over AI Training

The Guardian, TechCrunch1 min brief

In brief

  • Google is being sued by a group of major publishers for using millions of copyrighted books to train its Gemini artificial intelligence models.
  • The lawsuit claims Google copied books without permission or payment, despite internal discussions acknowledging the legal risks.
  • The publishers argue that Google's actions harm authors and the publishing industry, as AI-generated content could negatively impact book sales.
  • For example, Gemini can generate a 100-page book in 20 minutes for 39 cents, making it impossible for publishers and authors to compete.
  • Google may face $10 billion to $100 billion in potential fines for using copyrighted works without permission, according to internal discussions cited in the lawsuit, and the case will move forward in a New York court.

Terms in this brief

Gemini
Gemini is Google's advanced AI language model, part of their broader efforts in developing cutting-edge AI technology. It is being sued for copyright infringement related to its training data, which allegedly included millions of copyrighted books without proper authorization.

Read full story at The Guardian, TechCrunch

More briefs