A week after Google updated its privacy policy to allow data scraping for AI training purposes, the company faces a class-action lawsuit.
News
Google is now facing a lawsuit following its recent privacy policy update that accuses the tech giant of misusing large amounts of data, including copyrighted material, in artificial intelligence (AI) training.
The class-action lawsuit was filed on July 11 by eight individuals who claim to represent “millions of class members” — internet users and copyright holders — who have had their privacy and property rights violated in light of Google’s recent updates to its privacy policy.
In its opening statement, the plaintiffs accuse Google of “harvesting data in secret” to build its AI products without consent.
Google’s privacy policy changes now allow it to take publicly available data for artificial intelligence (AI) training purposes.
The lawsuit points out that Google’s decision not only violates rights, but gives it an “unfair advantage” compared with its competitors, which lawfully obtain or purchase data to train AI. Ryan Clarkson of Clarkson Law Firm, the plaintiffs’ attorney, said in a statement that:
The plaintiffs argued that “publicly available” does not and has never entailed that it is “free to use for any purpose.”
Related: OpenAI pauses ChatGPT’s Bing feature, as users were jumping paywalls
According to the lawsuit, Google could potentially owe upward of $5 billion in damages. It also requested a court order requiring Google to obtain users’ explicit permission first.
This includes allowing users to opt out of its “illicit data collection,” along with the ability to delete already existing data or provide “fair compensation” to owners of the data.
Earlier this week, author and comedian Sarah Silverman, together with two other authors, filed a lawsuit against ChatGPT maker OpenAI and Meta for their use of copyrighted work without permission in AI training.
Prior to that, OpenAI was hit with another lawsuit for alleged data scraping.
Collect this article as an NFT to preserve this moment in history and show your support for independent journalism in the crypto space.
Magazine: Super Mario: Crypto Thief, Sega blockchain game, AI games rights fight — Web3 Gamer