Five of the world’s largest book publishers and acclaimed author Scott Turow have filed a high-stakes class-action lawsuit against Meta and its CEO, Mark Zuckerberg. The legal action alleges that the social media giant engaged in industrial-scale copyright infringement by using thousands of protected books to train its artificial intelligence models.
Filed in federal court, the complaint names Zuckerberg personally as a defendant, a move that legal experts say signals a shift in accountability for AI-related data scraping. The plaintiffs argue that Meta’s Llama language models were developed using pirated datasets containing copyrighted literary works without any compensation or authorization.
The publishers involved include industry titans such as Penguin Random House, HarperCollins, Hachette, Macmillan, and Simon & Schuster. These organizations claim that the unauthorized use of their intellectual property threatens the very foundation of the publishing industry and the livelihoods of writers.
Scott Turow, a prominent novelist and former president of the Authors Guild, joined the suit to represent the interests of individual creators. He stated that tech companies cannot be allowed to build multi-billion dollar products on the backs of stolen creative labor.
Meta has previously defended its training practices by citing fair use doctrines, arguing that AI training creates transformative new works. However, the lawsuit contends that the systematic ingestion of private literary data constitutes a direct violation of federal copyright law.
The plaintiffs are seeking a permanent injunction to prevent Meta from using their copyrighted materials for future AI development. They are also demanding statutory damages that could potentially reach billions of dollars given the scale of the alleged data theft.
This case follows a series of similar legal battles between content creators and Silicon Valley firms over the ethics of generative AI. If successful, the ruling could redefine how tech companies acquire data and force a massive restructuring of the AI industry’s supply chain.
Industry analysts suggest that naming Mark Zuckerberg personally is intended to pierce the corporate veil and highlight executive involvement in data acquisition strategies. Meta has not yet issued a formal response to the specific allegations contained in this latest filing.
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