ROSS Loses To TR Bigtime: Judge looked at possible copyright infringement defenses for Ross Intelligence and said, ‘I reject them all.’

Header Image: US District Court of Delaware judge Stephanos Bibas

This is not looking good for ROSS , which as we all know no longer actually exists other than in name.

I’m looking forward to seeing the Caseway guy’s reaction to this after his run in with CANLII 

As they say.. The plot thickens

The Verge

On Tuesday, US District Court of Delaware judge Stephanos Bibas issued a partial summary judgment in favor of Thomson Reuters in its copyright infringement lawsuit against Ross Intelligence, a legal AI startup. Filed in 2020, it’s one of the first cases that will deal with the legality of AI tools and how they are trained, often using copyrighted data scraped from somewhere else without license or permission.

Similar lawsuits against OpenAI, Microsoft, and other AI giants are currently winding their way through the courts, and they could come down to similar questions about whether or not the AI tools can claim a “fair use” defense of using copyrighted material.

 

In a statement given to The Verge by Thomson Reuters spokesperson Jeff McCoy, the company said:

We are pleased that the court granted summary judgment in our favor and concluded that Westlaw’s editorial content created and maintained by our attorney editors, is protected by copyright and cannot be used without our consent. The copying of our content was not “fair use.”

However, as the judge noted, this case involved “non-generative” AI, not a generative AI tool like an LLM. Ross shut down in 2021, calling the lawsuit “spurious” but saying it was unable to raise enough funding to keep going while caught up in a legal battle.

As reported previously by Wired, today Judge Bibas wrote in his decision, “None of Ross’s possible defenses holds water” against accusations of copyright infringement, and ultimately rejected Ross’s fair-use defense, relying heavily on the factor of how Ross’s use of copyrighted material affected the market for the original work’s value by building a direct competitor.

Source: https://www.theverge.com/news/610721/thomson-reuters-ross-intelligence-ai-copyright-infringement

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