Claude AI chatbot creator Anthropic sued by authors for copyright infringement
The Hindu
A group of authors is suing artificial intelligence startup Anthropic, alleging it committed “large-scale theft.”
A group of authors is suing artificial intelligence startup Anthropic, alleging it committed “large-scale theft” in training its popular chatbot Claude on pirated copies of copyrighted books.
While similar lawsuits have piled up for more than a year against competitor OpenAI, maker of ChatGPT, this is the first from writers to target Anthropic and its Claude chatbot.
The smaller San Francisco-based company — founded by ex-OpenAI leaders — has marketed itself as the more responsible and safety-focused developer of generative AI models that can compose emails, summarise documents, and interact with people in a natural way.
But the lawsuit filed Monday in a federal court in San Francisco alleges that Anthropic's actions “have made a mockery of its lofty goals” by tapping into repositories of pirated writings to build its AI product.
(Unravel the complexities of our digital world on The Interface podcast, where business leaders and scientists share insights that shape tomorrow’s innovation. The Interface is also available on YouTube, Apple Podcasts and Spotify.)
“It is no exaggeration to say that Anthropic’s model seeks to profit from strip-mining the human expression and ingenuity behind each one of those works," the lawsuit says.
Anthropic didn't immediately respond to a request for comment Monday.













