Workflow
OpenELM语言模型
icon
Search documents
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].
苹果遭两名美国学者起诉,被指控使用盗版书训练AI
Sou Hu Cai Jing· 2025-10-11 03:31
Core Points - A collective lawsuit has been filed against Apple by two academic authors from the State University of New York, alleging unauthorized use of their copyrighted works in training the Apple Intelligence AI system [1] - The plaintiffs claim that Apple utilized content from their books "Champions of Illusion" and "Sleights of Mind" without permission, which were included in the Books3 database [1] - Apple acknowledged in April 2024 that it used a dataset called The Pile for training the OpenELM language model, which contained the Books3 database at that time [1] - Although the Books3 database was removed in October 2023 due to copyright disputes, the plaintiffs argue that Apple had already completed the copying and training of their works [1]