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苹果遭集体侵权诉讼:被指控使用盗版图书训练Apple Intelligence 头像
3 6 Ke· 2025-10-11 03:53
Core Viewpoint - Apple is facing a lawsuit for allegedly using thousands of copyrighted books without authorization to train its new AI system, "Apple Intelligence" [1][2]. Group 1: Lawsuit Details - The lawsuit was filed by two scholars from the State University of New York, who claim that Apple used data from a piracy library known as "Books3" to train its AI model [1][2]. - The dataset "The Pile," which Apple discussed in relation to its OpenELM language model, included works from the "Books3" library, which contained over 186,000 books obtained through a private BitTorrent tracker [2]. - The plaintiffs argue that Apple's actions constitute direct copyright infringement, as their works were included in the unauthorized dataset [2]. Group 2: Financial Implications - The plaintiffs are seeking a court order to stop Apple from using their copyrighted works and demand monetary compensation, which could reach up to $150,000 per work under U.S. copyright law for willful infringement [3]. - Following the announcement of Apple Intelligence, the company's market value surged by $200 billion in a single day, highlighting the significant commercial value of its AI business [3]. Group 3: Industry Context - This lawsuit is part of a broader trend of legal disputes concerning AI training data, with other tech giants like OpenAI, Microsoft, and Meta also facing similar lawsuits from authors and media organizations [4]. - In August, Anthropic reached a $1.5 billion settlement regarding copyright claims related to its AI model, although the court ruled that using books for AI training could be considered "fair use" [4]. - As of now, Apple has not commented on the lawsuit [4].