Midjourney, Stability AI and DeviantArt issued a response on April 18 to a group of artists who accused them of extensive copyright infringement. The artists claimed that these companies had used their work in generative artificial intelligence (AI) systems without proper authorization.
The companies filed their motions in a San Francisco federal court seeking the dismissal of the proposed class action lawsuit brought by the artists. They contended that the AI-generated images were dissimilar to the artists' work and that the lawsuit lacked specific information about the allegedly misused photos.
In January, Sarah Andersen, Kelly McKernan and Karla Ortiz filed a lawsuit against the companies, claiming that their rights had been violated. The artists alleged that their works were used without permission to train the systems and that the resulting AI-generated images, created in their styles, were also infringing.
In their filing on Tuesday, Stability AI, a deep learning, text-to-image model AI company, argued that the artists ‘fail to identify a single allegedly infringing output image, let alone one that is substantially similar to any of their copyrighted works.’ Midjourney, an AI company that generates images from natural language descriptions, said that the lawsuit also does not ‘identify a single work by any plaintiff’ that it ‘supposedly used as training data.’
DeviantArt, an online community for artists that offers a service enabling users to generate images using Stability AI's Stable Diffusion system, supported the same arguments as Stability AI. Additionally, it claimed that it was not responsible for any alleged wrongdoing by the AI companies.
There is a possibility of AI programs infringing copyright by generating
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