CLS Blue Sky Blog

Cleary Gottlieb Discusses Roadblocks for Plaintiffs in Generative Artificial Intelligence Lawsuit

On October 30, 2023, U.S. District Judge William Orrick of the Northern District of California issued an Order[1]largely dismissing without prejudice the claims brought by artists Sarah Andersen, Kelly McKernan and Karla Ortiz in a proposed class action lawsuit against artificial intelligence (“AI”) companies Stability AI, Inc., Stability AI Ltd. (together, “Stability AI”), DeviantArt, Inc. (“DeviantArt”) and Midjourney, Inc. (“Midjourney”).  Andersen is the first of many cases brought by high-profile artists, programmers and authors (including John Grisham, Sarah Silverman and Michael Chabon) seeking to challenge the legality of using copyrighted material for training AI models.

Background

Stability AI, DeviantArt and Midjourney all provide tools and services that use AI to generate new images based on text prompts offered by consumers.  The Complaint alleges that the Large-Scale Artificial Intelligence Network (“LAION”), a German non-profit which makes open-sourced datasets, scraped over five billion images from the internet (including works by the plaintiffs) at the behest of Stability AI.[2]  The Complaint further alleges that (i) Stability AI used this LAION dataset for the purpose of training its Stable Diffusion software product, (ii) DeviantArt and Midjourney incorporated Stable Diffusion into their products and (iii) Midjourney’s AI product was also “trained on a subset of the images used to train Stable Diffusion” (suggesting that Midjourney conducted its own training using the LAION dataset).[3]  Claims brought against the defendants included direct copyright infringement, vicarious copyright infringement, violations of the Digital Millennium Copyright Act, violations of California’s right of publicity statute and common law rights of publicity and unfair competition under California state law.  All three defendants filed separate motions to dismiss, and DeviantArt filed a separate anti-SLAPP motion to strike the right of publicity claims, in which both Midjourney and Stability AI joined.

In the first instance, Judge Orrick dismissed Ortiz’s and McKernan’s copyright claims with prejudice because neither of them had fulfilled the requisite registration requirements to bring suit by registering their images with the Copyright Office, and further narrowed Andersen’s copyright claims to only those images in Andersen’s collection which had been registered with the Copyright Office at the time the suit was filed.[4]  The court also dismissed with prejudice plaintiffs’ claims for unfair competition, finding those claims are preempted by the U.S. Copyright Act to the extent they are based on alleged copyright infringement.  Judge Orrick granted leave to amend as to all other claims, but warned “I will not be as generous with leave to amend on the next, expected rounds of motions to dismiss and I will expect a greater level of specificity as to each claim alleged and the conduct of each defendant in support of each claim.”  Below are some key takeaways from the Order.

Key Takeaways

ENDNOTES

[1] Order on Motions to Dismiss and Strike (the “Order”), Andersen v. Stability AI Ltd. et al, 3:23-cv-00201 (N.D. Cal. Oct. 30, 2023).

[2] Complaint at 57, 101, 104, Andersen, 3:23-cv-00201.

[3] Id. at *34-35, 57, 62, 101, 104, 115, 134, 148-49.

[4] Order at *5.

[5] Id. at *8-14.

[6] Id. at *7.

[7] Id. at *10-12.

[8] Id. at *11-12.

[9] Id. at *9.

[10] Id.

[11] Id. at *15-16.

[12] HaveIbeentrained.com is a website created by a group of artists who call themselves “Spawning,” which allows individuals to check whether their art or photos have been used as part of the training data for text-to-image AI tools.

[13] Id. at *6-7.

This post comes to us from Cleary Gottlieb Steen & Hamilton LLP. It is based on the firm’s memorandum, “SIGNIFICANT ROADBLOCKS FOR PLAINTIFFS IN GENERATIVE ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE  LAWSUIT:  California Judge Dismisses Most Claims Against AI Developers in Andersen v. Stability AI,” dated November 2, 2023, and available here. Cleary Gottlieb represents Midjourney in this matter.

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