US-based software giant Adobe is facing serious legal trouble in the US after a writer filed a proposed class action lawsuit accusing the company of using copyrighted books to train its artificial intelligence tools without taking permission from authors, Reuters reported. The case adds Adobe to the growing list of tech companies being sued over how their AI models are trained.The lawsuit was filed in a California federal court by author Elizabeth Lyon. She has alleged that Adobe misused her books, along with works from other writers, to train its AI systems. According to the complaint, these books were used without consent or compensation. Elizabeth Lyon is known for writing instructional books that help authors market and promote their novels.ALSO
READ: Bill Gates Warns Of AI Bubble, Says Many Startups May Not Survive The Hype In her complaint, she claimed that Adobe relied on pirated copies of her books to train its SlimLM small language models. These AI models are used to assist users with document-related tasks, especially on mobile devices, Reuters reported.According to the report, Lyon has filed the lawsuit on behalf of a proposed class that includes all copyright owners whose works were allegedly used by Adobe without permission. She is asking the court to award monetary damages, though the exact amount has not been specified in the filing.This case is particularly important because it is the first major AI copyright lawsuit filed against Adobe. While companies like OpenAI, Meta, Google and Anthropic have already been dragged to court by authors and publishers, Adobe had largely stayed out of this legal spotlight until now.The lawsuit also comes at a time when concerns around AI training data are growing rapidly. Many authors argue that tech companies are building powerful AI tools by using books, articles and creative content from the internet without proper licensing or credit. These writers say this practice directly threatens their livelihoods.Several similar lawsuits are already underway in the US. Dozens of authors have sued AI-focused companies like OpenAI and Anthropic over alleged copyright violations.For Adobe, the case could have major implications. The company has been aggressively promoting its AI-powered tools across products like Photoshop, Acrobat and other Creative Cloud services. If the court rules against Adobe, it could force changes in how AI models are trained and how companies source data.


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