Publishers sue Google over alleged use of books to train AI models
- Multiple book publishers sued Google on Tuesday for allegedly stealing copyrighted content, using it to train artificial intelligence (AI) models and then generating content that "directly" competes with the original authors' work.
- "The scale and speed at which Gemini can create books and compete with human writers is unprecedented," the lawsuit says.
- The lawsuit, which requests class action status, was filed in New York by Hachette Book Group, Cengage Learning, Elsevier, author Scott Turow and his publishing company S.
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- Multiple book publishers sued Google on Tuesday for allegedly stealing copyrighted content, using it to train artificial intelligence (AI) models and then generating content that "directly" competes with the original authors' work.
- "The scale and speed at which Gemini can create books and compete with human writers is unprecedented," the lawsuit says.
- The lawsuit, which requests class action status, was filed in New York by Hachette Book Group, Cengage Learning, Elsevier, author Scott Turow and his publishing company S.
Sources: France 24