Major Music Publishers Fire Back Against Anthropic Dismissal Motion in High-Stakes Infringement Dispute
Photo Credit: Igor Omilaev
A little over a month out from the one-year anniversary of its start, the copyright suit levied by major music publishers against Anthropic is heating up amid the AI giantâs renewed push for dismissal.That push, music publisher plaintiffs including Concord and UMPG emphasized in their latest filing, actually marks the second attempt by Anthropic to dismiss the high-stakes case. As many know by now, the courtroom confrontation centers on alleged infringement stemming from the training process behind Anthropicâs Claude product.
The filing companies have pointed to the alleged presence of lyrics in the chatbotâs outputs â and claimed, among other things, that the alleged âmassive copyright infringementâ helps Anthropic to generate revenue and attract users.
Multiple twists and one time-consuming venue change later, Anthropic last month (again) fired back against the publishersâ push for a preliminary injunction blocking the continued use of lyrics in outputs and in future training.
And now, the music publishers themselves are taking the opportunity to refute Anthropicâs latest dismissal arguments as well as the appropriate motion. Predictably, given the ultra-important caseâs plodding nature, this 33-page refutation doesnât break too much new ground. Instead, the publishers drove home that Anthropicâs dismissal motion is untimely in part because it arrived before a formal answer to the suit.
Running with the latter idea, the plaintiffs indicated that Anthropic had âdeliberately contravened the Federal Rulesâ by ignoring purported warnings about the timing of its answer (or the lack thereof).
In short, the Amazon-backed AI mainstay is working âto gain a litigation advantage by prioritizing resolutionâ of the dismissal motion without first answering the complaint.
âWhen Anthropic answers the Complaint,â the publishers spelled out, âit will have to admit facts that it so far refuses to acknowledge directly, including that Anthropic copied Publishersâ lyrics when training Claude and made no effort to remove those lyrics from its training dataset despite its ability to do so.â
And from there, the publishers took aim at Anthropicâs specific dismissal arguments, which are looking to toss each claim save that involving direct infringement.âPublishers are not required to name and date every instance of direct infringement to state a claim for secondary infringement,â the plaintiffs reiterated in part. âPublishers plausibly allege that Anthropicâs AI models respond to queries from users seeking copyrighted lyricsâincluding queries from Publishersâ investigatorsâby delivering those lyrics as requested.
âThat allegation, without naming specific infringing users, is sufficient to set forth a valid claim for secondary copyright liability,â they proceeded.
Furthermore, dismissal would be âespecially unwarrantedâ because the plaintiffs have yet to âdiscover from Anthropic what other third parties have requested from the Claude chatbot or APIs,â per the precedent-heavy legal text.