U.S. Copyright Office Activities in 2024: A Year in Review — The U.S. Copyright Office accomplishs an incredible amount of work given its lean staff. The Copyright Alliance’s Rachel Kim highlights some of the Office’s legal and policy efforts over the past year and previews what to expect in the year ahead.
Zuckerberg Appeared to Know Meta Trained AI on Pirated Library — “In an email to Joelle Pineau, vice president of AI research at Meta, Sony Theakanath, director of product management, wrote, ‘After a prior escalation to MZ [Mark Zuckerberg], GenAI has been approved to use LibGen for Llama 3 […] with a number of agreed upon mitigations.’ The note observed that including the LibGen material would help them reach certain performance benchmarks, and alluded to industry rumors that other AI companies, including OpenAI and Mistral AI, are ‘using the library for their models.’ In the same email, Theakanath wrote that under no circumstances would Meta publicly disclose its use of LibGen.”
Telegram Shuts Down Z-Library & Anna’s Archive Channels Over Copyright Infringement — Torrentfreak reports, “Telegram is one of the most popular messaging tools, chosen by many online services to stay connected with their audiences. Major shadow libraries Z-Library and Anna’s Archive used Telegram until this week, when both accounts were terminated for copyright infringement. While these websites offer infringing content, both were cautious to avoid copyright troubles on Telegram.”
8th Cir.: Realtors’ use of home design floorplans in listings is fair use — “In a significant ruling for the real estate industry, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit has affirmed summary judgment in favor of real estate agents who were sued for copyright infringement after including floorplans in their listings of homes designed by an architect and his company Designworks Homes, Inc. The court held that creating simplified floorplans to market existing homes constitutes fair use of architectural designs because it serves a different purpose than the original designs and does not harm the architect’s market for designing and building home.”
Government seeks responses on copyright and AI consultation — “The UK Government has launched a consultation seeking views on potential changes to UK copyright law and the potential establishment of licensing schemes, aiming to resolve the tension between creative industries and AI developers. The tension exists because AI developers want to access large volumes of data – whether that be text, graphics, photographs or other inputs – to train their AI models, but the owners of copyright and related rights in such data want to be able to control the use of their works by AI models and/or receive remuneration if permission is granted.”