In the second landmark decision this week relating to whether use of copyrighted content for training generative AI qualifies as a fair use, Judge Chhabria, in the federal court for the Northern District of California, ordered summary judgment in favor of Meta Platforms Inc. (Meta), finding that Meta’s copying of a group of 13 bestselling authors’ books as training data for use in Meta’s large language training model (LLM) “Llama” was a fair use. Kadrey, et al. v. Meta Platforms, Inc., Case No. 23-cv-0317-VC. This groundbreaking decision out of the NDCA follows Judge Alsup’s ruling earlier this week that Anthropic’s use of legally obtained books for training its LLMs was a fair use, Bartz et al. v. Anthropic PBC, which we covered here.

The orders in both cases determined that the LLM’s use of copyrighted data for training generative AI was “highly transformative” and that the first copyright fair use factor therefore weighed heavily in favor of the AI developers. In both cases, the plaintiffs were unable to demonstrate sufficient market harm to overcome the heavy weight placed on the transformative nature of the AI models. The decisions, however, differed notably as to each judge’s consideration of the source of the copyrighted works and whether the works were obtained through authorized channels or from “pirate websites.”Continue Reading Back-to-Back Fair Use Decisions: Two NDCA Courts Find Fair Use for AI Training, Emphasizing That the Specific Facts Concerning Alleged Market Harm Will Be Critical in Overcoming AI’s “Highly Transformative” Technology

On February 6, 2024, in Philpot v. Independent Journal Review, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit issued a copyright fair use decision in a photograph infringement case that is noteworthy for a number of reasons. Those who plan to use photos based on a fair use defense should take heed of this decision.

In this case, photographer Larry Philpot sued news website Independent Journal Review for using Philpot’s photo of singer Ted Nugent in an online article. One of the more interesting facts here was that Philpot uploaded his photo to Wikimedia Commons, which is governed by a Creative Commons license requiring attribution. In other words, he simply required that users of his photo give him attribution, not pay him. Users could use Philpot’s photo free of charge, provided they included the following attribution: “Photo Credit: Larry Philpot of www.soundstagephotography.com.” Instead, Independent Journal Review hyperlinked to Mr. Nugent’s Wikipedia page, where the photo was featured.Continue Reading Fourth Circuit Hands Photographer a Clean Sweep Victory in Copyright Fair Use Appeal Over News Website’s Use of Free of Charge Photo