Major US Newspapers Sue Perplexity Over Alleged Copyright Infringement
In a move that highlights the ongoing battle between traditional media and AI companies, The New York Times and Chicago Tribune have filed separate lawsuits against Perplexity, accusing the AI firm of copyright infringement. Despite sending multiple cease-and-desist demands to Perplexity, the company allegedly continued to scrape content from The Times' website to train its AI models.
The New York Times claims that Perplexity infringed on its copyrights in two main areas. Firstly, by using scraped content to feed into its AI models and products like Claude chatbot and Comet browser. Secondly, by reproducing articles verbatim in the output of its generative AI products, damaging The Times' brand with false attributions of fabricated information.
Chicago Tribune has also filed a similar lawsuit against Perplexity, alleging that the company's genAI products generate identical or substantially similar outputs to its own content. According to the newspaper, Perplexity has unlawfully copied millions of copyrighted Chicago Tribune stories, videos, images, and other works without permission.
These lawsuits are part of a growing trend in US courts, with dozens of cases involving copyright holders and AI companies already underway. The Times had previously sued OpenAI and Microsoft, accusing them of training their large language models on its articles without permission. However, some media companies have licensed their content to AI firms. For instance, OpenAI has struck multiple deals with media companies, including a reported $25 million-per-year agreement with Amazon that saw The Times join the partnership this year.
As AI technology advances and its applications become more widespread, copyright holders will likely continue to challenge the use of their content by these companies. With billions of dollars at stake, the battle over intellectual property rights in the digital age is set to remain a contentious issue for years to come.
In a move that highlights the ongoing battle between traditional media and AI companies, The New York Times and Chicago Tribune have filed separate lawsuits against Perplexity, accusing the AI firm of copyright infringement. Despite sending multiple cease-and-desist demands to Perplexity, the company allegedly continued to scrape content from The Times' website to train its AI models.
The New York Times claims that Perplexity infringed on its copyrights in two main areas. Firstly, by using scraped content to feed into its AI models and products like Claude chatbot and Comet browser. Secondly, by reproducing articles verbatim in the output of its generative AI products, damaging The Times' brand with false attributions of fabricated information.
Chicago Tribune has also filed a similar lawsuit against Perplexity, alleging that the company's genAI products generate identical or substantially similar outputs to its own content. According to the newspaper, Perplexity has unlawfully copied millions of copyrighted Chicago Tribune stories, videos, images, and other works without permission.
These lawsuits are part of a growing trend in US courts, with dozens of cases involving copyright holders and AI companies already underway. The Times had previously sued OpenAI and Microsoft, accusing them of training their large language models on its articles without permission. However, some media companies have licensed their content to AI firms. For instance, OpenAI has struck multiple deals with media companies, including a reported $25 million-per-year agreement with Amazon that saw The Times join the partnership this year.
As AI technology advances and its applications become more widespread, copyright holders will likely continue to challenge the use of their content by these companies. With billions of dollars at stake, the battle over intellectual property rights in the digital age is set to remain a contentious issue for years to come.