FSF threatens Anthropic over infringed copyright: share your LLMs freely
7 hours ago
- #copyright
- #AIethics
- #FreeSoftware
- Anthropic was sued in 2024 for allegedly infringing copyrights while training its LLMs.
- The Free Software Foundation (FSF) claims Anthropic's training data included their copyrighted book, 'Free as in Freedom: Richard Stallman's Crusade for Free Software', published under the GNU Free Documentation License (GNU FDL).
- FSF urges Anthropic and other LLM developers to share complete training inputs, models, configurations, and source code with users to uphold computing freedom.
- FSF, though resource-limited, may seek user freedom as compensation if their copyright is found violated in lawsuits like Bartz v. Anthropic.
- The FSF's stance is summarized as not usually suing for copyright infringement but settling for freedom when they do.
- Debate arises over the meaning of providing LLMs 'in freedom', with interpretations ranging from free usage by everyone to releasing models under free licenses.
- Critics question the coherence of FSF's demands, while supporters highlight RMS's historically accurate 'extreme' predictions regarding software freedom.
- The discussion touches on the implications of copyright laws and fair use in the context of AI model training and the potential for derived works to be considered under copyleft.