The case, filed in 2020, accused Ross Intelligence of reproducing materials from Thomson Reuters' Westlaw legal research ...
A judge ruled that a former competitor of Thomson Reuters was not permitted to copy its content to build an AI-based legal platform.
In the first AI copyright case ruling, a court concludes that training an AI system using copyrighted material isn't fair use. That will likely be cited by creators fighting other tech giants.
A judge looked at possible copyright infringement defenses for Ross Intelligence and said, ‘I reject them all.’ ...
An AI company lifted material from Thomson Reuters' research platform, arguing fair use and innocent infringement. A court ...
(Corrects third to last paragraph to say "the erosion from LOEs (loss of exclusivity)", not "from LOEs (levels of evidence)") ...
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