CIR Seeks Statutory Damages, Injunctions, and Attorney Fees from OpenAI

Written by legalpdf | Published 2024/08/15
Tech Story Tags: ai-copyright-infringement | cir-v.-openai | ai-plagiarism | ai-training-data | openai-copyright-lawsuit | openai-dmca-violation | ai-ethics | ai-and-ip

TLDRThe plaintiff seeks statutory damages or the total of damages and profits from the defendants, an injunction to remove all copyrighted works from training sets and repositories, and attorney fees and costs. A jury trial is also requested.via the TL;DR App

The Center for Investigative Reporting Inc. v. OpenAI Court Filing, retrieved on June 27, 2024, is part of HackerNoon’s Legal PDF Series. You can jump to any part in this filing here. This part is 18 of 18.

PRAYER FOR RELIEF

Plaintiff seeks the following relief:

(i) Either statutory damages or the total of Plaintiff’s damages and Defendants’ profits, to be elected by Plaintiff;

(ii) An injunction requiring Defendants to remove all copies of the Registered Works from their training sets and any other repositories;

(iii) An injunction requiring Defendants to remove all copies of Plaintiff’s copyrighted works from which author, title, copyright, or terms of use information was removed from their training sets and any other repositories;

(iv) Attorney fees and costs.

JURY DEMAND

Plaintiff demands a jury trial.

RESPECTFULLY SUBMITTED,

/s/ Stephen Stich Match

Jonathan Loevy*

Michael Kanovitz*

Lauren Carbajal*

Stephen Stich Match (No. 5567854)

Matthew Topic*

Thomas Kayes*

Steven Art*

LOEVY & LOEVY

311 North Aberdeen, 3rd Floor

Chicago, IL 60607

312-243-5900 (p)

312-243-5902 (f)

[email protected]

[email protected]

[email protected]

[email protected]

[email protected]

*pro hac vice forthcoming

June 27, 2024


About HackerNoon Legal PDF Series: We bring you the most important technical and insightful public domain court case filings.

This court case retrieved on June 27, 2024, motherjones.com is part of the public domain. The court-created documents are works of the federal government, and under copyright law, are automatically placed in the public domain and may be shared without legal restriction.


Written by legalpdf | Legal PDFs of important tech court cases are far too inaccessible for the average reader... until now.
Published by HackerNoon on 2024/08/15