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A U.S. court lets copyright lawsuit against AI firm Cohere proceed, citing evidence of unauthorized use of news articles to train AI.
A U.S. court has allowed a copyright lawsuit against Canadian AI firm Cohere to move forward, rejecting its bid to dismiss the case.
The publishers, including the Toronto Star, Condé Nast, and the Guardian, allege Cohere scraped their articles without permission to train AI models, copying expression, style, and structure.
Judge Colleen McMahon found sufficient evidence, including 75 examples, to support the claims, ruling that altered AI outputs can still infringe copyright.
The case is part of over 50 similar lawsuits challenging AI training practices and could impact how companies use copyrighted content.
The publishers seek up to $150,000 per infringement.
Un tribunal estadounidense permite que continúe la demanda por derechos de autor contra la empresa de IA Cohere, citando evidencia del uso no autorizado de artículos de noticias para entrenar a la IA.