GitHub Users File a Class-Action Lawsuit Against Microsoft for Training an AI To...
source link: https://www.vice.com/en/article/bvm3k5/github-users-file-a-class-action-lawsuit-against-microsoft-for-training-an-ai-tool-with-their-code
Go to the source link to view the article. You can view the picture content, updated content and better typesetting reading experience. If the link is broken, please click the button below to view the snapshot at that time.
GitHub Users File a Class-Action Lawsuit Against Microsoft for Training an AI Tool With Their Code
GitHub programmers have filed a class-action lawsuit against GitHub, its parent Microsoft, and its technology partner, OpenAI, for allegedly violating their open-source licenses and using their code to train Microsoft’s latest AI tool, called Copilot.
GitHub Copilot, which was launched in June, suggests code and functions to GitHub users in real time. Copilot is powered by Codex, an AI system that was created by OpenAI and licensed to Microsoft. According to OpenAI, Codex was trained on “millions of public repositories” and is “an instance of transformative fair use.” However, open-source programmers on GitHub disagree, claiming that Codex has violated their open-source licenses, which only allow non-commercial redistribution and modification of the code and often have restrictions including a requirement to preserve the name of the authors.
Lawyer and programmer Matthew Butterick has been leading the action against Microsoft, starting a site dedicated to the GitHub Copilot investigation and teaming up with the Joseph Saveri Law Firm to file the class-action lawsuit.
"As a longtime open-source programmer, it was apparent from the first time I tried Copilot that it raised serious legal concerns, which have been noted by many others since Copilot was first publicly previewed in 2021," Butterick said in a press release. "Because I'm also a lawyer, I felt compelled to stand up for the open-source community."
Other programmers who have been using Copilot have noted that it generated the incorrect license for code and produced users’ copyrighted code verbatim without proper attribution or license.
“We’ve been committed to innovating responsibly with Copilot from the start, and will continue to evolve the product to best serve developers across the globe,” a spokesperson from GitHub told Motherboard when asked to comment on the lawsuit.
When GitHub was purchased by Microsoft in 2018, many users were vocal about their concern about how the largest open-source community in the world would be affected. In the late 90s and 2000s, Microsoft waged a number of campaigns against Linux, an open-source operating system, claiming that it violated 235 Microsoft patents in 2007.
"I am grateful to the programmers and users who came forward to bring this case to fruition and ensure that corporations like Microsoft, GitHub, and OpenAI cannot unfairly profit from the work of open-source creators," said Joseph Saveri, the lawyer whose firm is filing the class-action lawsuit. "This case represents the first major step in the battle against intellectual-property violations in the tech industry arising from artificial-intelligence systems. In this case, the work of open-source programmers is being exploited. But this will not be the last community of creators who are affected by AI systems. Our firm is committed to standing up for these creators and ensuring that companies developing AI products are held accountable under the law."
This lawsuit represents a growing concern that programmers, artists, and other people have been vocalizing—that AI systems may be using their code, artwork, and other data without permission. Algorithms used by image-generating AI tools such as DALL-E and Stable Diffusion scrape billions of webpages of data from the internet, without factoring in if their usage is violating any ownership or licensing restrictions. Companies like Getty Images and Shutterstock have banned the use of AI images on their platforms due to copyright concerns.
Butterick says that Microsoft’s offering of Copilot as an alternative to open-source code not only violates copyright but also removes the incentive for programmers to explore open-source communities. To Butterick, Microsoft’s compartmentalization of open-source code violates the ethos of open-source programming, in which programmers often voluntarily share code with one another as part of their mutual learning and development.
ORIGINAL REPORTING ON EVERYTHING THAT MATTERS IN YOUR INBOX.
By signing up, you agree to the Terms of Use and Privacy Policy & to receive electronic communications from Vice Media Group, which may include marketing promotions, advertisements and sponsored content.
Recommend
-
5
CDPR to launch 'vigorous' defense against Cyberpunk 2077 class action lawsuit Investors claim they were misled and incurred substantial losses By...
-
3
US TikTok Users Can Claim Part of a $92 Million Class Action Lawsuit Against the App Published Nov. 16, 2021 By
-
5
Why The Netherlands Just Filed A Class Action Lawsuit Against Apple ...
-
5
BSV investors file £9.9 billion class action lawsuit against Binance, Bittylicious, Kraken and Shapeshift Business 2 August 2022
-
5
Class-action lawsuit filed against Microsoft's GitHub Copilot for software piracy...
-
5
RTX 4090 owner launches class-action lawsuit against Nvidia over melting adapters The plaintiff is "experienced in the installation of computer components" By
-
4
Stable Diffusion goes to court — Artists file class-action lawsuit against AI image generator companies Suit seeks damages from Stability AI, Midjourney, and DeviantArt.
-
4
Class Action Lawsuit Filed Against DCG and Barry Silbert
-
4
Employee lawsuit against Amazon over work-from-home expenses loses class-action bid Amazon says working remotely during the pandemic wasn't its idea By
-
3
About Joyk
Aggregate valuable and interesting links.
Joyk means Joy of geeK