Legal experts said there are key differences in Thomson Reuters' case against Ross Intelligence and other major AI-related copyright litigation.
In his summary judgment, Bibas said that “none of Ross’s possible defenses holds water” and ruled in favor of Thomson Reuters on the issue of “fair use.” The “fair use
After reconsidering the case, the judge issued a partial summary judgement, which asks whether a non-generative AI system’s content counts as original work.
According to a Reuters story, This year, according to reports, OpenAI intends to produce its first proprietary artificial intelligence (AI)
Thomson Reuters has won an early battle in court over the question of fair use in artificial intelligence-related copyright cases. The media and technology company filed a lawsuit against Ross Intelligence — a now-defunct legal research firm — in 2020,
A judge ruled Ross Intelligence copied Westlaw data without permission, in a blow to AI developer's fair use claims.
Users are adopting artificial intelligence tools at an unprecedented pace. As reported by Reuters, OpenAI weekly active users surged past 400 million in February, reinforcing the observation.
Apple didn't immediately respond to a Reuters request for comment. Apple has been rushing to incorporate artificial intelligence into its devices to get ahead of rivals. Reuters had earlier reported that the iPhone maker is in talks with Tencent and TikTok owner ByteDance about integrating their artificial intelligence models into iPhones sold in China.
Circuit Judge Stephanos Bibas issued a ruling updating a previous summary judgment decision dismissing copyright infringement allegations made by Westlaw legal research service provider Thomson Reuters against a competing artificial intelligence search tool developed by Ross Intelligence.
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PCMag on MSNThomson Reuters Secures Major Win in AI Copyright BattleThe judge rules that replicating human-authored content without permission does not qualify as 'fair use' of AI under copyright law.
The case, filed in 2020, accused Ross Intelligence of reproducing materials from Thomson Reuters' Westlaw legal research database to build a competing AI-powered legal platform. Judge
Thomson Reuters has won the first major AI copyright case in the United States, reports Kate Knibbs of Wired. Knibbs reports, “In 2020, the media and technology conglomerate filed an unprecedented AI copyright lawsuit against the legal AI startup Ross Intelligence.
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