Social media platform Reddit sued the artificial intelligence company Perplexity AI and three other entities on Wednesday, alleging their involvement in an βindustrial-scale, unlawfulβ economy to βscrapeβ the comments of millions of Reddit users for commercial gain.
Redditβs lawsuit in a New York federal court takes aim at San Francisco-based Perplexity, maker of an AI chatbot and βanswer engineβ that competes with Google, ChatGPT and others in online search.
Also named in the lawsuit are Lithuanian data-scraping company Oxylabs UAB, a web domain called AWMProxy that Reddit describes as a βformer Russian botnet,β and Texas-based startup SerpApi, which lists Perplexity as a customer on its website.
Itβs the second such lawsuit from Reddit since it sued another major AI company, Anthropic, in June.
But the lawsuit filed Wednesday is different in the way that it confronts not just an AI company but the lesser-known services the AI industry relies on to acquire online writings needed to train AI chatbots.
βScrapers bypass technological protections to steal data, then sell it to clients hungry for training material. Reddit is a prime target because itβs one of the largest and most dynamic collections of human conversation ever created,β said Ben Lee, Redditβs chief legal officer, in a statement Wednesday.
The lawsuit accuses the companies of unfair competition and unjust enrichment and alleges that some of them violated U.S. copyright laws.
Perplexity said it has not yet received the lawsuit but βwill always fight vigorously for usersβ rights to freely and fairly access public knowledge. Our approach remains principled and responsible as we provide factual answers with accurate AI, and we will not tolerate threats against openness and the public interest.β
SerpApiβs customer success director, Ryan Schafer, said in an email: βWe strongly disagree with Redditβs allegations and intend to vigorously defend ourselves in court.β
Oxylabs said in a statement it was βshocked and disappointedβ and βwill not hesitate to defend itself against these allegations.β
βOxylabsβ position is that no company should claim ownership of public data that does not belong to them,β said a statement from Denas Grybauskas, the companyβs chief governance and strategy officer. βIt is possible that it is just an attempt to sell the same public data at an inflated price.β
AWMProxy could not immediately be reached for comment.
Scraping for publicly available online data is a common practice used by businesses and researchers but Reddit compares the companies it is suing to βwould-be bank robbersβ who canβt get into the bank vault, so they break into the armored truck instead. The lawsuit alleges they are evading Redditβs own anti-scraping measures while also βcircumventing Googleβs controls and scraping Reddit content directly from Googleβs search engine results.β
Lee said that because theyβre unable to scrape Reddit directly, βthey mask their identities, hide their locations, and disguise their web scrapers to steal Reddit content from Google Search. Perplexity is a willing customer of at least one of these scrapers, choosing to buy stolen data rather than enter into a lawful agreement with Reddit itself.β
Reddit made a similar argument in its lawsuit against Anthropic, alleging that the company ignored Redditβs appeals to cease using its content. That case was initially filed in California Superior Court but was later moved to federal court and has a hearing scheduled for January.
Along with digitized books and news articles, websites such as Wikipedia and Reddit are deep troves of written materials that can help teach an AI assistant the patterns of human language.
Reddit has previously entered licensing agreements with Google, OpenAI and other companies that are paying to be able to train their AI systems on the public commentary of Redditβs more than 100 million daily users.
The licensing deals helped the 20-year-old online platform raise money ahead of its Wall Street debut as a publicly traded company last year.