Nvidia has found itself on the receiving end of a class action lawsuit alleging copyright infringement by its artificial intelligence platform NeMo. The litigation poses an obstacle to Nvidia fully realizing its AI ambitions that have propelled its stock to unprecedented heights.
The Santa Clara, California-based tech giant has been trying to stay at the forefront of the AI revolution in more ways than one. A significant portion of its recent research and development efforts were hence focused on producing and optimizing hardware for machine learning applications. At the same time, the company has also been trying to innovate on the software side of things, oftentimes with great success, as underlined by the high adoption rate of technologies like Nvidia's DLSS solution for upscaling and (as of version 3.5) frame generation.
Its ongoing artificial intelligence push has also expanded to generative AIs as of a few years ago. The company's flagship offering in this niche is NeMo, an end-to-end cloud framework for building and deploying generative AI models akin to ChatGPT. This solution has now been targeted by a class action lawsuit initiated by a number of novelists. As first reported by Reuters, authors Abdi Nazemian, Brian Keene, and Stewart O'Nan claim that their works were part of NeMo's training dataset meant to help teach it how to simulate human writing. Since their works are said to have been included in the training data without their permission, the novelists allege copyright infringement on Nvidia's part.
The dataset at the center of the lawsuit reportedly comprised over 196,000 books as of October 2023, when it was taken down following a complaint by the copyright holders. The plaintiffs are seeking damages for the alleged unlicensed use of their works for commercial purposes, though the extent of their compensation target is currently unclear.
On a fundamental level, the newly filed litigation is similar to the class lawsuit that George RR Martin and many
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