A US judge has ruled that using books to train artificial intelligence (AI) software is not a violation of US copyright law.
The decision came out of a lawsuit brought last year against AI firm Anthropic by three writers, a novelist, and two non-fiction authors, who accused the firm of stealing their work to train its Claude AI model and build a multi-billion dollar business.
In his ruling, Judge William Alsup wrote that Anthropic's use of the authors' books was "exceedingly transformative" and therefore allowed under US law.
But he rejected Anthropic's request to dismiss the case, ruling the firm would have to stand trial over its use of pirated copies to build their library of material.
