Piracy Lawsuit Targeting Meta Challenges Accountability in AI Creation
- Meta faces lawsuit over alleged AI training with pirated porn content, denying claims as baseless. - Strike 3 alleges 2,400 adult film downloads via hidden IP addresses to develop AI video tools since 2018. - Meta argues downloads were likely personal use, citing low annual rates and no evidence linking to AI models. - Case joins broader copyright lawsuits against AI firms, with OpenAI facing similar claims over ChatGPT training data. - Meta's AI spending surged to $71B in 2025, straining finances as leg
Meta Confronts Lawsuit Over Alleged Use of Pirated Adult Content for AI Training
Meta Platforms Inc. is attempting to have a lawsuit dismissed that was brought by Strike 3 Holdings LLC, an adult film distributor based in Miami. The suit accuses Meta of unlawfully downloading thousands of pornographic videos to train its artificial intelligence systems. Meta has dismissed these claims as "illogical and baseless," asserting that the accusations rely on "speculation and insinuation" rather than any solid proof of AI training, according to
According to Strike 3, Meta’s alleged downloads—including those routed through a “stealth network” of 2,500 untraceable IPs—were part of a coordinated plan to create a secret adult-oriented version of its AI video generation tool, as Ars Technica reported. In its motion to dismiss, Meta argues that the supposed activity—an average of just 22 downloads per year across 47 IP addresses—does not match the scale or intent needed for systematic AI training, as also noted by Ars Technica. Meta further points out that its terms of service strictly ban the creation of adult content, making the lawsuit’s claims unlikely, according to Ars Technica.
Meta also maintains that these downloads were probably for personal use by staff, contractors, or external parties, not for any company AI project. The company’s filing notes that many of the downloads happened before Meta’s major AI research began, and there is no direct evidence linking the activity to specific employees or AI models, as Ars Technica observed. The filing states, “Monitoring every file downloaded by anyone using Meta’s global infrastructure would be an extremely difficult and intrusive task,” rejecting the idea that Meta should be liable for unverified torrenting by unidentified individuals, as Ars Technica also reported.
This lawsuit is part of a larger trend of copyright cases aimed at AI companies. In a related matter, a federal judge in New York recently rejected OpenAI’s attempt to dismiss a lawsuit from authors who allege their works were used to train ChatGPT, according to
Meta’s financial reports also show the increasing costs associated with AI development. The company’s third-quarter results were mixed, with operating margins dropping to 40% from 43% in 2024, due to a 28% increase in research and development spending, according to
The resolution of the Strike 3 lawsuit could have far-reaching effects on how AI training is conducted. If Meta wins, it could strengthen the position that companies are not responsible for unverified user actions on their networks, as discussed in
Disclaimer: The content of this article solely reflects the author's opinion and does not represent the platform in any capacity. This article is not intended to serve as a reference for making investment decisions.
You may also like
BlockDAG's community-focused, institution-level approach emerges as the leading crypto model for 2025
- BlockDAG (BDAG) emerges as a top 2025 crypto contender with a $435M presale and alleged Coinbase/Kraken partnerships, signaling institutional confidence. - Its hybrid DAG + PoW architecture (15,000 TPS) and community-driven model differentiate it from speculative assets like Pudgy Penguins (PENGU) and Near Protocol (NEAR). - PENGU and NEAR face bearish trends and volatility, highlighting risks for projects reliant on VC funding or speculative demand. - BDAG's retail-focused presale (312K holders) and tra

Crypto Whale’s $400 Million Wager Challenges Market Anxiety Amid Fed Division
- A top crypto whale with a "100% win rate" has increased Bitcoin long exposure to $400M, signaling strong confidence in digital assets despite market volatility. - The whale's portfolio prioritizes Bitcoin and institutional-friendly altcoins like XRP, reflecting growing institutional adoption and regulatory clarity trends. - Fed rate-cut disagreements and EU crypto regulatory reforms highlight macroeconomic uncertainties and potential institutional confidence boosts for crypto markets. - The whale's aggre

Bitcoin Updates: Outflows in Bitcoin and Ethereum—Strategic Investment or Indication of Waning Interest?
- Bitcoin and Ethereum face $2.6B in exchange outflows, signaling potential long-term holding shifts or market pessimism post-October downturn. - Whale activity, including $260M BTC transfers from Binance, suggests strategic moves toward off-exchange storage amid reduced trading volumes. - October's 4% Bitcoin and 7.15% Ethereum losses shattered the "Uptober" trend, fueling debates over investor confidence versus market weakness. - Analysts highlight lower blockchain activity and liquidity risks, with Nove

Ethereum Updates: DeFi Enigma: Did the 20,000 ETH Withdrawal Fund an Aave Loan or Serve as a Risk Management Move?
- A crypto address withdrew 20,000 ETH from a CEX, sparking speculation it could repay an Aave loan or adjust DeFi collateral ratios. - Aave's v3 platform streamlines borrowing, driving increased utilization as traders rebalance risk in volatile markets. - Blockchain analysts note the receiving address's prior Aave interactions, though the transaction's exact purpose remains unconfirmed. - Experts caution DeFi users about liquidation risks and slippage when managing leveraged positions amid price fluctuati
