The NVIDIA technology giant was hit with a suit By three authors, Brian Kane, Abdel Nazis, and Stewart Onan. The collective lawsuit claims that the company uses its copyright -protected work without delegating it to train the artificial intelligence platform (AI), NEMO. They said that their books were included in the collection of data, which includes about 2 books of Kah, which trained Nemo to repeat a simple written language before it came down due to reports of copyright.
The lawsuit, which was filed in the San Francisco Federal Court, indicates that this removal supports their demands and indicates that Nafidia recognizes the violation of its protected work and copyright. Since they accuse NEMO of training in the data set, the lawsuit also seeks to obtain damage to those who live in the United States whose work has been used without permission to train big language models in NEMO over the past few years. The legal battle now focuses on both artificial intelligence and intellectual property.
The alleged works that have been violated for copyrights include a wide range of literary materials, including the 2008 “Ghost Walk” and Nazemian’s Nazemian 2019 “Like A Love Story” and O’Nan’s 2007 Novela “last night at Lobster”.
Moreover, NVIDIA decided to silence in this regard and refused to say anything about Kene, Nazemian and O’Nan allegations. The graphics processing giant in California has not issued an official statement on the lawsuit filed. The authors’ lawyers also refrained from commenting on this issue.
The NVIDIA case adds to the list of companies that fall into a legal problem on artificial intelligence. Several writers and pioneering media, such as the New York Times, have taken legal measures against companies that use their work to train models to create new content based on text, photos and sound. Earlier, a lawsuit against other companies was filed for the same reason, including Openai, created by ChatGPT and Microsoft.