bug-bounty570
xss395
exploit307
google281
rce232
facebook201
microsoft186
writeup143
malware142
cve141
web3127
apple101
account-takeover92
csrf92
open-source91
browser89
phishing71
sqli71
dos66
cloudflare66
ai-agents63
pentest60
ssrf60
privilege-escalation60
reverse-engineering54
supply-chain53
ctf51
auth-bypass49
oauth47
tool46
lfi46
cloud45
aws44
privacy44
node40
react40
idor39
race-condition38
llm37
opinion35
info-disclosure34
cors33
automation33
clickjacking32
machine-learning32
code-generation31
infrastructure31
access-control27
postmessage27
subdomain-takeover26
0
2/10
Meta argues that uploading pirated books via BitTorrent while downloading training data for its Llama LLM qualifies as fair use, claiming the uploads were an inherent and necessary part of the protocol rather than intentional infringement. The defense is being challenged by authors in an ongoing class-action lawsuit, with the court still deciding whether this 'fair use by technical necessity' argument will be accepted.
copyright-infringement
fair-use
bittorrent
llm-training
ai-training-data
shadow-libraries
legal-analysis
piracy
Meta
Richard Kadrey
Sarah Silverman
Christopher Golden
Llama
Anna's Archive
Judge Vince Chhabria
California federal court