Anthropic agrees to pay $1.5 billion to settle author class action | Technology News


Anthropic told a San Francisco federal judge on Friday that it has agreed to pay $1.5 billion to settle a class-action lawsuit from a group of authors who accused the artificial intelligence company of using their books to train its AI chatbot Claude without permission. The plaintiffs in a court filing asked U.S. District Judge William Alsup to approve the settlement, after announcing the agreement in August without disclosing the terms or amount.

“This settlement sends a powerful message to AI companies and creators alike that taking copyrighted works from these pirate websites is wrong,” the authors’ lawyers said in a statement. They called it the largest copyright recovery in history and the first of its kind in the artificial intelligence era.

The proposed deal marks the first settlement in a string of lawsuits against tech companies including OpenAI, Microsoft and Meta Platforms over their use of copyrighted material to train generative AI systems.

Story continues below this ad

Anthropic as part of the settlement said it will destroy downloaded copies of books the authors accused it of pirating, and under the deal it could still face infringement claims related to material produced by the company’s AI models.

The $1.5 billion settlement fund amounts to $3,000 for 500,000 downloaded books, and it could grow if more works are identified.

In a statement, Anthropic said the company is “committed to developing safe AI systems that help people and organizations extend their capabilities, advance scientific discovery, and solve complex problems.” The agreement does not include an admission of liability. Writers Andrea Bartz, Charles Graeber and Kirk Wallace Johnson filed the class action against Anthropic last year. They argued that the company, which is backed by Amazon and Alphabet, unlawfully used millions of pirated books to teach its AI assistant Claude to respond to human prompts.

The writers’ allegations echoed dozens of other lawsuits brought by authors, news outlets, visual artists and others who say that tech companies stole their work to use in AI training. The companies have argued their systems make fair use of copyrighted material to create new, transformative content. Alsup ruled in June that Anthropic made fair use of the authors’ work to train Claude, but found that the company violated their rights by saving more than 7 million pirated books to a “central library” that would not necessarily be used for that purpose.

Story continues below this ad

A trial was scheduled to begin in December to determine how much Anthropic owed for the alleged piracy, with potential damages ranging into the hundreds of billions of dollars.

Mary Rasenberger, CEO of writers advocacy group the Authors Guild, in a statement on Friday called the settlement “a vital step in acknowledging that AI companies cannot simply steal authors’ creative work to build their AI.” The pivotal fair-use question is still being debated in other AI copyright cases. Another San Francisco judge hearing a similar ongoing lawsuit against Meta ruled shortly after Alsup’s decision that using copyrighted work without permission to train AI would be unlawful in “many circumstances.”




Related Posts

Plot twist in 1066: That epic march to Hastings may be a myth | Technology News

3 min readNew DelhiUpdated: Mar 21, 2026 06:06 PM IST One of the most well-known episodes in English history is now being challenged by new research. For centuries, it has…

Tech workers go all-in on AI, but returns may be flattening | Technology News

At Anthropic, a single user of the company’s AI coding system, Claude Code, racked up a bill of more than $150,000 in a month. And at tech companies like Meta…

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

You Missed

Meet Team USA’s ‘giantkillers’ who handed Tom Brady, Joe Burrow brutal losses in Fanatics Flag Football

  • By admin
  • March 22, 2026
  • 0 views
Meet Team USA’s ‘giantkillers’ who handed Tom Brady, Joe Burrow brutal losses in Fanatics Flag Football

Why is oil and gas PSU stock ONGC the lone star amid the US-Iran war? Explained

  • By admin
  • March 22, 2026
  • 0 views
Why is oil and gas PSU stock ONGC the lone star amid the US-Iran war? Explained

Restaurants add protein, fiber for weight loss drug users

  • By admin
  • March 22, 2026
  • 1 views
Restaurants add protein, fiber for weight loss drug users

Former FBI Director Robert Mueller, who investigated Russia-Trump campaign ties, dies | World News

  • By admin
  • March 22, 2026
  • 5 views
Former FBI Director Robert Mueller, who investigated Russia-Trump campaign ties, dies | World News

Pathan drops bold MI over CSK call in greatest franchise debate, cites massive India impact: ‘How do you achieve that?’

  • By admin
  • March 22, 2026
  • 8 views
Pathan drops bold MI over CSK call in greatest franchise debate, cites massive India impact: ‘How do you achieve that?’

AJ Brown trade update: Patriots worried about Eagles’ asking price; Jaylen Waddle factor revealed

  • By admin
  • March 21, 2026
  • 7 views
AJ Brown trade update: Patriots worried about Eagles’ asking price; Jaylen Waddle factor revealed