Meta, the social media giant, has filed a motion to dismiss a lawsuit alleging that employees downloaded pornography from Strike 3 Holdings to train its artificial intelligence models. The company claims that employees used these downloads for "personal use" and not for AI training purposes.
According to Meta, the alleged downloads spanned over seven years, with only a few dozen titles linked to Meta IP addresses and employees. The company argues that it has no evidence that Meta directed any of the downloads or was even aware of the illegal activity.
Meta claims that its terms prohibit generating adult content, which contradicts the premise that such materials might be useful for AI training. Instead, the company believes that the flagged adult content was torrented for "private personal use" due to the small amount linked to Meta IP addresses and employees.
The lawsuit had sought damages of over $350 million, but Meta's motion to dismiss suggests that it may not have to pay out any money if the court rules in its favor. The company has accused Strike 3 of relying on "guesswork and innuendo" and has described the alleged AI training theory as "nonsensical and unsupported."
Meta is also slamming Strike 3's claim about a "stealth network" of hidden IPs, which it claims presents a conundrum that Strike 3 fails to address. The company argues that it would not use easily traceable Meta corporate IP addresses for many hundreds of other files.
The court has two weeks to review the motion and respond to Strike 3's complaint. For Meta, defeating the lawsuit is crucial in defending its commitment to ensuring its AI video tools don't generate explicit content.
				
			According to Meta, the alleged downloads spanned over seven years, with only a few dozen titles linked to Meta IP addresses and employees. The company argues that it has no evidence that Meta directed any of the downloads or was even aware of the illegal activity.
Meta claims that its terms prohibit generating adult content, which contradicts the premise that such materials might be useful for AI training. Instead, the company believes that the flagged adult content was torrented for "private personal use" due to the small amount linked to Meta IP addresses and employees.
The lawsuit had sought damages of over $350 million, but Meta's motion to dismiss suggests that it may not have to pay out any money if the court rules in its favor. The company has accused Strike 3 of relying on "guesswork and innuendo" and has described the alleged AI training theory as "nonsensical and unsupported."
Meta is also slamming Strike 3's claim about a "stealth network" of hidden IPs, which it claims presents a conundrum that Strike 3 fails to address. The company argues that it would not use easily traceable Meta corporate IP addresses for many hundreds of other files.
The court has two weeks to review the motion and respond to Strike 3's complaint. For Meta, defeating the lawsuit is crucial in defending its commitment to ensuring its AI video tools don't generate explicit content.