French authors and publishers take on Meta for using their books to train AI

French authors and publishers take on Meta for using their books to train AI

France's leading associations representing authors and publishers on Wednesday said they had filed a lawsuit against US tech titan Meta for what they alleged was the widespread use of copyright-protected texts to train AI models.

Issued on: 12/03/2025 - 13:43

French organisations representing publishers and authors said Wednesday they were launching legal action against Facebook owner Meta, after their books were used to train generative AI applications.

The three groups – publishers' outfit SNE and authors' and composers' groups SGDL and SNAC – complained in a statement of "massive use of copyrighted works without authorisation from their authors and publishers" by the American company, accusing the tech giant of economic "parasitism".

"We have established the presence of many works published by SNE members in the body of data used by Meta," SNE chief Vincent Montagne said in the statement.

The three associations believe that Meta, which owns the Facebook, Instagram and WhatsApp social networks, was illegally using copyrighted content to train its AI models.

"We are witnessing monumental looting," said Maia Bensimon, general delegate of SNAC.

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Meta has acknowledged using a database, Books3, containing the full texts of around 200,000 books including some in French to train its Llama large language model.

In a separate US court case launched by authors, the company admitted last year to using the database until 2023, claiming that the AI training constituted "fair use" of the copyright-protected books.

French publishers and authors have not publicly communicated an estimated value of the harm to them by Meta.

Their case at the Paris judicial court "should lead to a serious desire emerging on the part of AIs to take the creative industries into account", SGDL head Christophe Hardy said.

He called on AI developers to "respect the legal framework and, where relevant, find compensation for the use of works that feed into" the technology.

(FRANCE 24 with AFP and Reuters)

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