The AI landscape is rapidly changing. To keep you up to date on the fast breaking legal updates in the AI space, we will be providing weekly updates summarizing significant news and legal developments, ranging from AI lawsuits and enforcement actions to legislation and regulations. Below are some highlights of key developments and articles you can view to learn more.
1) EU approves landmark AI law, leapfrogging US to regulate worrying new technology
European Union lawmakers gave final approval on March 13, 2024 to a landmark law governing artificial intelligence. The first-of-its-kind law is poised to reshape how businesses and organizations in Europe use AI for everything from health care decisions to policing.
Artificial Intelligence Act: MEPs adopt landmark law | News | European Parliament (europa.eu)
EU approves landmark AI law, leapfrogging US to regulate worrying new technology | CNN Business
2) New York Times denies OpenAI’s ‘hacking’ claim in copyright fight
The Times responded to OpenAI’s motion to dismiss by stating that the claim is largely “grandstanding.” In defense of OpenAI’s claim that the Times paid an unnamed “hire gun” to manipulate its product into reproducing the newspaper’s contents, the Times stated that it simply used the first few words or sentences of it articles to prompt ChatGPT to recreate them.
New York Times denies OpenAI’s ‘hacking’ claim in copyright fight | Reuters
3) Nvidia is sued by authors over AI use of copyrighted works
Chipmaker, Nvidia Corp, was sued by three authors who said Nvidia used their copyrighted books without permission to train its AI platform, NeMo. Brian Keene, Abdi Nazemian and Stewart O’Nan said their works were part of a dataset of about 196,640 books that helped train NeMo to simulate ordinary written language, before being taken down in October “due to reported copyright infringement.” The authors said the takedown reflects Nvidia’s having “admitted” it trained NeMo on the dataset, and thereby infringed their copyrights.
Nvidia is sued by authors over AI use of copyrighted works | Reuters
4) Writers sue Databricks Inc. alleging copyright infringement for the use of their work in AI Platform, MosaicML
Software firm, Databricks Inc. was sued by three authors for copyright infringement claiming that their large language model was trained on datasets that used Books3, which includes thousands of pirated books.
Tatev Hovhannisyan also contributed to this article.