Reuters v ROSS: Webscraping For AI Just Died In One Day

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  • Опубліковано 11 лют 2025
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    This video by Richard Aragon explores the February 2025 court case Reuters v. ROSS, where the US District Court for the District of Delaware ruled in favor of Reuters, setting a significant precedent for AI and copyright law.
    The case centered around ROSS Intelligence, an AI legal research assistant, which used Reuters-owned Westlaw's legal database, including copyrighted headnotes and key number system, to train its AI model. Despite initial rulings in favor of ROSS, the judge ultimately found ROSS guilty of copyright infringement, rejecting arguments of fair use and transformative use.
    The video delves into the specifics of the case, including the judge's rulings on copyright infringement, the copyrightability of Westlaw's key number system, and the rejection of ROSS's fair use defense. It also analyzes the implications of this ruling for the future of AI, particularly concerning AI training data and copyright law, the use of copyrighted material in AI training, and the protection of proprietary research tools.
    Furthermore, the video discusses the potential impact on various industries, including legal, journalism, academia, and music, highlighting the need for AI companies to be cautious about sourcing training data. It also touches upon the broader implications for AI ethics and regulation, data licensing, and AI model transparency.
    Finally, the video provides a concluding analysis of the winners and losers in this case, suggesting a shift towards stricter copyright enforcement, licensing models for training data, and increased transparency requirements for AI developers. It raises concerns about the potential concentration of power in large companies that own valuable datasets and the impact on open-source AI research.

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