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Apple sued for allegedly scraping 70 million YouTube videos

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Why This Matters

This lawsuit against Apple underscores the growing legal and ethical challenges tech companies face when using user-generated content to train AI models. It highlights the importance of respecting creators' rights and the need for transparent, fair practices in AI development, which could influence future industry standards and regulations. For consumers, it raises awareness about how their online content may be used without consent in the rapidly evolving AI landscape.

Key Takeaways

Aamir Siddiqui / Android Authority

TL;DR Apple is facing a lawsuit from YouTubers over alleged use of videos to train its AI models.

The creators claim Apple used their content without permission, payment, or credit.

A dataset called Panda-70M is at the center, indexing millions of YouTube clips for AI training.

Apple’s AI plans are facing a familiar challenge as creators push back, and now they are taking the issue to court.

Three YouTube channels have sued Apple, claiming the company secretly collected videos from the platform to train its AI models (via MacRumors). The case involves well-known channels like h3h3Productions and golf creators such as MrShortGame Golf and Golfholics. They say Apple used their videos without permission, payment, or even basic credit.

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The lawsuit says Apple did more than just link to content. It claims Apple got around YouTube’s protections to download and use videos directly. The creators argue this breaks the Digital Millennium Copyright Act, which bans getting past systems meant to protect copyrighted material.

The lawsuit also says Apple made significant profits by using creators’ content to build its AI system, without giving anything back to the people who made the videos.

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