×
Meta denies torrenting 2,400 adult films to train AI models
Written by
Published on
Join our daily newsletter for breaking news, product launches and deals, research breakdowns, and other industry-leading AI coverage
Join Now

Meta has asked a US district court to dismiss a lawsuit alleging the tech giant illegally torrented pornography to train AI models. Strike 3 Holdings, an adult film company, filed the suit after discovering downloads of adult films on Meta’s corporate IP addresses, seeking damages potentially exceeding $350 million based on claims that Meta was secretly developing an adult version of its AI model powering Movie Gen.

Meta’s defense strategy: The company argues the lawsuit relies on “guesswork and innuendo” and lacks evidence connecting Meta to the alleged downloads.

  • Meta claims Strike 3 Holdings “has been labeled by some as a ‘copyright troll’ that files extortive lawsuits.”
  • The company argues there’s no evidence Meta directed downloads of approximately 2,400 adult movies or was even aware of the illegal activity.
  • “These claims are bogus,” Meta’s spokesperson told Ars Technica.

Timeline doesn’t add up: Meta points to a critical gap between when downloads occurred and when its AI development began.

  • The flagged downloads spanned seven years starting in 2018, about four years before Meta’s AI efforts “researching Multimodal Models and Generative Video” began.
  • Meta’s terms of service prohibit generating adult content, “contradicting the premise that such materials might even be useful for Meta’s AI training.”

Personal use theory: Meta argues the evidence suggests individual employees downloaded content for private consumption rather than corporate AI training purposes.

  • The activity amounted to only about 22 downloads per year—”a few dozen titles per year intermittently obtained one file at a time.”
  • “The far more plausible inference to be drawn from such meager, uncoordinated activity is that disparate individuals downloaded adult videos for personal use,” Meta’s filing stated.
  • This contrasts sharply with lawsuits from book authors whose works are part of massive AI training datasets.

Network access complications: Meta highlighted the impossibility of definitively linking downloads to specific employees or purposes.

  • “Tens of thousands of employees,” plus “innumerable contractors, visitors, and third parties access the Internet at Meta every day.”
  • Strike 3 “does not identify any of the individuals who supposedly used these Meta IP addresses” or specify whether any were Meta employees involved in AI training.
  • A Meta contractor allegedly downloaded content at his father’s house, but worked as an “automation engineer” with no apparent connection to AI training data sourcing.

The “stealth network” puzzle: Meta called Strike 3’s claims about hidden IP addresses logically inconsistent.

  • Strike 3 alleged Meta used a “stealth network” of 2,500 “hidden IP addresses” to conceal some downloads while using easily traceable corporate IPs for others.
  • “Why would Meta seek to ‘conceal’ certain alleged downloads of Plaintiffs’ and third-party content, but use easily traceable Meta corporate IP addresses for many hundreds of others?” Meta questioned.
  • “The obvious answer is that it would not do so,” the company argued, calling Strike 3’s “entire AI training theory” as “nonsensical and unsupported.”

What they’re saying: Meta maintains its commitment to preventing explicit content generation in its AI tools.

  • “We don’t want this type of content, and we take deliberate steps to avoid training on this kind of material,” Meta’s spokesperson said.
  • The company suggested Strike 3 provided no evidence that Meta trained AI on its content because “there was none.”

What’s next: Strike 3 Holdings has two weeks to respond to Meta’s motion to dismiss, according to TorrentFreak, a news site covering file-sharing and copyright issues.

Meta says porn downloads on its IPs were for “personal use,” not AI training

Recent News

AI deepfakes of physicist Michio Kaku spread false comet conspiracy claims

Sophisticated fakes weaponize scientific credibility just as comet 3I/ATLAS reaches its closest solar approach.

Microsoft takes $3.1B hit from OpenAI investment amid growing rivalry

Microsoft now owns 27% of OpenAI despite listing it as an official competitor.

1X launches $20K Neo robot requiring human remote control for basic tasks

Remote operators see everything while customers pay to be beta testers.