Stock photo provider, Getty Images has sued artificial intelligence company Stability AI, accusing it in a lawsuit made public on Monday of misusing more than 12 million Getty photos to train its Stable Diffusion AI image-generation system.
The lawsuit, filed in Delaware federal court, follows a
separate Getty case against Stability in the United Kingdom and a related
class-action complaint filed by artists in California against Stability and
other companies in the fast-growing field of generative AI.
Getty declined to comment on the Delaware lawsuit.
Representatives for Stability did not immediately respond to a request for
comment Monday. Reuters News competes with Getty in the market for images for
editorial use.
London-based Stability AI released Stable Diffusion, an
AI-based system for generating images from text inputs, and image generator
DreamStudio last August. The company announced in October that it had raised
over $100 million in funding, and has
been valued at $1 billion.
Seattle-based Getty accused Stability of copying millions of
its photos without a license and using them to train Stable Diffusion to
generate more accurate depictions based on user prompts.
Getty said its pictures are particularly valuable for AI
training because of their image quality, variety of subject matter and detailed
metadata.
Getty said it has licensed "millions of suitable
digital assets" to other "leading technology innovators" for
AI-related purposes, and that Stability infringes its copyrights and competes
with it unfairly.
The lawsuit also accuses Stability of infringing Getty's
trademarks, citing images generated by its AI system with Getty's watermark
that Getty says could cause consumer confusion.
Getty asked the court to order Stability to stop using its
pictures and requested money damages that include Stability's profits from the
alleged infringement. © Reuters
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