Anthropic wins early round in music publishers' AI copyright case


Anthropic logo is seen in this illustration taken March 31, 2023. REUTERS/Dado Ruvic/Illustration/File Photo

(Reuters) -Artificial intelligence company Anthropic convinced a California federal judge on Tuesday to reject a preliminary bid to block it from using lyrics owned by Universal Music Group and other music publishers to train its AI-powered chatbot Claude.

U.S. District Judge Eumi Lee said that the publishers' request was too broad and that they failed to show Anthropic's conduct caused them "irreparable harm."

The publishers said in a statement that they "remain very confident in our case against Anthropic more broadly." An Anthropic spokesperson said the company was pleased that the court did not grant the publishers' "disruptive and amorphous request."

Music publishers UMG, Concord and ABKCO sued Anthropic in 2023, alleging that it infringed their copyrights in lyrics from at least 500 songs by musicians including Beyoncé, the Rolling Stones and the Beach Boys.

The publishers claimed Anthropic used the lyrics without permission to train Claude to respond to human prompts.

The lawsuit is one of several arguing that copyrighted works by authors, news outlets, visual artists and others have been misused without consent or payment to develop AI products.

Tech companies including OpenAI, Microsoft and Meta Platforms have said that their systems make "fair use" of copyrighted material under U.S. copyright law by studying it to learn to create new, transformative content.

Fair use is likely to be the determinative question in the lawsuits, though Lee's opinion did not specifically address the issue.

Lee rejected the publishers' argument that Anthropic's use of their lyrics caused them irreparable harm by diminishing their licensing market.

"Publishers are essentially asking the Court to define the contours of a licensing market for AI training where the threshold question of fair use remains unsettled," Lee said.

(Reporting by Blake Brittain in Washington; Editing by Stephen Coates)

Follow us on our official WhatsApp channel for breaking news alerts and key updates!

Next In Tech News

Lucid unveils steering wheel-free robotaxi concept, taking aim at Tesla's Cybercab
US appeals court throws out injunction against California law on children's online safety
Microsoft's Rajesh Jha, head of experiences and devices unit, to retire
Ukraine opens battlefield data access to allies' AI models
SoftBank-backed PayPay shares set to open 38% above IPO price
Exclusive-Italian prosecutors seek trial for Amazon, four execs over alleged $1.4 billion tax evasion
Pentagon CTO says 'no chance' of renewed Anthropic negotiations
Bumble shares surge as investors swipe right on AI-powered reboot
US insurers and hospitals turn to new AI for age-old battle over charges vs payments
Google names London office 'Platform 37' in a nod to railway neighbour, AI 'Go' match

Others Also Read