Xorte logo

News Markets Groups

USA | Europe | Asia | World| Stocks | Commodities



Add a new RSS channel

 
 


Keywords

2024-07-25 20:23:14| Engadget

AI company Runway reportedly scraped thousands of YouTube videos and pirated versions of copyrighted movies without permission. 404 Media obtained alleged internal spreadsheets suggesting the AI video-generating startup trained its Gen-3 model using YouTube content from channels like Disney, Netflix, Pixar and popular media outlets. An alleged former Runway employee told the publication the company used the spreadsheet to flag lists of videos it wanted in its database. It would then download them without detection using open-source proxy software to cover its tracks. One sheet lists simple keywords like astronaut, fairy and rainbow, with footnotes indicating whether the company had found corresponding high-quality videos to train on. For example, the term superhero includes a note reading, Lots of movie clips. (Indeed.) Other notes show Runway flagged YouTube channels for Unreal Engine, filmmaker Josh Neuman and a Call of Duty fan page as good sources for high movement training videos. The channels in that spreadsheet were a company-wide effort to find good quality videos to build the model with, the former employee told 404 Media. This was then used as input to a massive web crawler which downloaded all the videos from all those channels, using proxies to avoid getting blocked by Google. Runway A list of nearly 4,000 YouTube channels, compiled in one of the spreadsheets, flagged recommended channels from CBS New York, AMC Theaters, Pixar, Disney Plus, Disney CD and the Monterey Bay Aquarium. (Because no AI model is complete without otters.) In addition, Runway reportedly compiled a separate list of videos from piracy sites. A spreadsheet titled Non-YouTube Source includes 14 links to sources like an unauthorized online archive of Studio Ghibli films, anime and movie piracy sites, a fan site displaying Xbox game videos and the animated streaming site kisscartoon.sh. In what could be viewed as a damning confirmation that the company used the training data, 404 Media found that prompting the video generator with the names of popular YouTubers listed in the spreadsheet spit out results bearing an uncanny resemblance. Crucially, entering the same names in Runways older Gen-2 model trained before the alleged data in the spreadsheets  generated unrelated results like generic men in suits. Additionally, after the publication contacted Runway asking about the YouTubers likenesses appearing in results, the AI tool stopped generating them altogether. I hope that by sharing this information, people will have a better understanding of the scale of these companies and what theyre doing to make cool videos, the former employee told 404 Media. When contacted for comment, a YouTube representative pointed Engadget to an interview its CEO Neal Mohan gave to Bloomberg in April. In that interview, Mohan described training on its videos as a clear violation of its terms. Our previous comments on this still stand, YouTube spokesperson Jack Mason wrote to Engadget. Runway did not respond to a request for commeInt by the time of publication. At least some AI companies appear to be in a race to normalize their tools and establish market leadership before users and courts catch onto how their sausage was made. Training with permission through licensed deals is one thing, and thats another tactic companies like OpenAI have recently adopted. But its a much sketchier (if not illegal) proposition to treat the entire internet copyrighted material and all as up for grabs in a breakneck race for profit and dominance. 404 Medias excellent reporting is worth a read.This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/ai-video-startup-runway-reportedly-trained-on-thousands-of-youtube-videos-without-permission-182314160.html?src=rss


Category: Marketing and Advertising

 

Latest from this category

21.02A judge ruled Tesla still has to pay $243 million for a fatal crash involving Autopilot
21.02How to know if an AirTag is tracking you
21.02Engadget review recap: Sony WF-1000XM6, ASUS Zenbook Duo and more
21.02An old-school Zelda-like, Skate Bums and other new indie games worth checking out
20.02Xbox head Phil Spencer is leaving Microsoft
20.02Tunic publisher claims TikTok ran 'racist, sexist' AI ads for one of its games without its knowledge
20.02OpenAI will reportedly release an AI-powered smart speaker in 2027
20.0213-hour AWS outage reportedly caused by Amazon's own AI tools
Marketing and Advertising »

All news

21.02A judge ruled Tesla still has to pay $243 million for a fatal crash involving Autopilot
21.02Trump says he will increase global tariffs to 15%
21.02President Trump says hes imposing a 15% global tariff, up from the 10% he announced after the Supreme Court decision
21.02MPs to discuss inquiry into trade envoy role after Andrew arrest
21.02Engadget review recap: Sony WF-1000XM6, ASUS Zenbook Duo and more
21.02How to know if an AirTag is tracking you
21.02The secret to all those death-defying Olympic jumps is a giant plastic airbag
21.02An old-school Zelda-like, Skate Bums and other new indie games worth checking out
More »
Privacy policy . Copyright . Contact form .