Microsoft in trouble for using copyrighted books to train AI
Authors, including Kai Bird, Jia Tolentino and Daniel Okrent, accuse Microsoft of copyright infringement, arguing that the company's AI model is trained using stolen intellectual property.
According to the complaint, the Megatron model learned the syntax, style and themes of the work by these authors. Also, the AI model is capable of mimicking authors' styles and voices.
The authors are seeking statutory damages of up to $150,000 per infringed work and a court order to stop Microsoft from using their material in the future.
The lawsuit also points out that Microsoft's use of the 'Books3' dataset is a collection of nearly 200,000 pirated books. It was a deliberate move to bypass licensing fees and agreements with authors and publishers.
The authors argue that this not only violates their copyrights but also encourages the use of illegal digital libraries. They claim Microsoft's Megatron AI model, trained on this unauthorised material, can create derivative works without permission.
This lawsuit is a part of a wave of complaints from authors and publishers against major tech companies like Meta, Anthropic and OpenAI. The complaint against Microsoft was filed just one day after a decision in California, where a judge ruled that the use of copyrighted material by Anthropic could be considered 'fair use' under U.S. copyright law.
But the case against Microsoft includes that it allegedly used the authors' work that was obtained illegally. And as of now, there is no public comment from Microsoft regarding this lawsuit. Attorneys also declined to comment on this ongoing lawsuit.

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