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The Briefing by the IP Law Blog

Authors Get Mixed Results with Initial Skirmish in OpenAI Lawsuit

Apr 26, 2024
Legal experts Scott Hervey and James Kachmar discuss the recent district court ruling on OpenAI's copyright infringement allegations. They explore vicarious infringement, DMCA violations, and the complexities of AI training. Authors like Sarah Silverman are embroiled in the lawsuit against OpenAI for using their works to train language models.
11:47

Podcast summary created with Snipd AI

Quick takeaways

  • To prove vicarious copyright infringement, plaintiffs must show ownership of valid copyright and substantial similarity to defendants' outputs.
  • Allegations under DMCA require specific evidence of copyright management information removal and mental state, with potential for future legal challenges.

Deep dives

Court's Ruling on Vicarious Copyright Infringement Claim

The court's order on the vicarious copyright infringement claim focused on the requirement to show direct infringement for this type of claim. To allege valid copyright infringement, the plaintiffs needed to demonstrate both ownership of a valid copyright in the work and that the defendant copied protectable aspects of their work. The court particularly emphasized the need to prove unlawful appropriation and substantial similarity between the plaintiff's works and the defendant's outputs. The court granted the plaintiffs the opportunity to amend their complaint to address the substantial similarity element.

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