Plaintiff Seeks 'No Less Than a Lump Sum' Up to $7.01B Against Google in Trial Over AI Accelerator Tech
"First, defendant Google LLC has access to a vast quantity of its users' personal data. It is almost certain that many, if not all, members of the venire are current users of Google's products and services. Although Google's counsel has stated unequivocally that it will not use its users' data for litigation advantage, nonetheless the potential for unwarranted (and asymmetrical) invasion of jurors' privacy is sufficiently substantial that an order prohibiting such conduct is warranted," Saylor wrote.
January 08, 2024 at 06:40 PM
4 minute read
The original version of this story was published on Law.com
As attorneys prepare to move forward in a patent infringement case that could put Google on the hook for potentially $7.01 billion, a federal judge in Massachusetts also issued an order to ensure potential jurors' privacy was not at issue.
U.S. District Chief Judge Dennis Saylor IV of the District of Massachusetts ordered Google from accessing "a vast quantity of users' personal data" during the jury selection process Monday in the case of Singular Computing v. Google. Boston-based hardware and software developer Singular accused Google of infringing products knowns as Tensor Processing Units, which are artificial intelligence "accelerators that are optimized for training and inference of large AI models," and used in chatbots, code generation, content generation, and synthetic speech.
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