Meta allegedly used copyrighted journals, books and other materials from the LibGen dataset to train its Llama AI models.
Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg gave Meta's Llama team approval to train on copyrighted documents, according to a new court filing.
The plaintiffs argue that Meta intentionally used copyrighted works without permission. Newly unsealed documents suggest that ...
Sometimes, companies trying to homebrew their own uncreativity engines attempt to throw money at this problem, licensing ...
Meta Platforms Inc. CEO Mark Zuckerberg approved the tech giant’s use of a pirated book dataset to train its AI model LLaMA, ...
Several authors have filed a lawsuit against Meta alleging it used pirated e-books and articles to train its AI models.
Meta Platforms, led by CEO Mark Zuckerberg, is facing allegations of using pirated books to train its artificial intelligence ...
Authors, including Ta-Nehisi Coates and comedian Sarah Silverman, accused Meta Platforms of using pirated books to train its ...
The authors sued Meta in 2023, arguing that the social media giant misused their books to train its large language model ...
Meta Platforms is accused by a group of authors of using pirated copyrighted books with CEO Mark Zuckerberg's approval to ...
Meta used pirated content (including copyrighted books) to train its Llama AI models with permission from its CEO, Mark ...
Wedbush analyst Dan Ives remains bullish and expects Tesla's market cap to hit $2 trillion in 2025, saying the coming four ...