
Snap has been added to the list of defendants by a group of YouTubers suing tech companies for using their films to train AI models without their consent. The plaintiffs, who own three YouTube channels with a combined subscriber base of about 6.2 million, claim that Snap used their video content to train its AI systems for use in features like the app’s “Imagine Lens”, which lets users edit images with text prompts.
The plaintiffs had already sued Nvidia, Meta, and ByteDance for comparable issues.
The YouTubers specifically criticise Snap for using a large-scale video-language dataset called HD-VILA-100M and others that were created solely for academic and research purposes in their recently filed proposed class action lawsuit, which was filed on Friday in the U.S. District Court for the Central District of California. The plaintiffs contend that Snap violated YouTube’s terms of service, technology constraints, and licence restrictions by using these databases for commercial purposes.
In order to prevent the claimed copyright infringement in the future, the lawsuit is requesting both statutory damages and a permanent injunction.
The owners of the 5.52 million-subscriber h3h3 YouTube channel and the lesser golfing channels MrShortGame Golf and Golfholics are spearheading the case.
H3H3 Productions and other creators are at the forefront of the case. They assert that Snap created features like Snapchat’s Imagine Lens using datasets that included YouTube videos. The Digital Millennium Copyright Act (DMCA) and YouTube’s rules are allegedly violated in the lawsuit. In order to stop their content from being used for AI training in the future, the producers are requesting an injunction and damages.
It is now one of several cases that content creators have filed against AI model suppliers. These lawsuits include copyright issues from publishers, authors, newspapers, user-generated content websites, artists, and more. Additionally, it’s not the first instance involving a YouTuber. More than 70 copyright infringement cases have been brought against AI businesses, according to the nonprofit organisation Copyright Alliance.
A judge has decided in favour of the tech giant in certain cases, such as one involving Meta and a group of authors. In other cases, such as the one involving Anthropic and a group of writers, the AI behemoth reached a settlement and paid the plaintiffs to settle their claims. Numerous cases are still being litigated.
This case reflects an ongoing legal argument about exploiting public content for commercial AI training, and it is similar to earlier lawsuits filed by the same producers against corporations such as Nvidia, Meta, and ByteDance.
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