The Future Is Now

Licensing Questions Plague Stability AI as SD3 Image Generator Gets Banned

Stability AI’s release of its latest major model, Stable Diffusion 3 (SD3), is facing significant backlash from the AI community due to its restrictive licensing terms, a growing controversy that prompted a major Stable Diffusion community hub to ban SD3-related work on Monday.

SD3 users are concerned about the potential implications of the SD3 license terms on future model development and improvement, which traditionally rely on open-source community contributions and involvement. Stability AI now separates out a consumer or a “Creator License” that is available only to developers with less than $1 million in annual revenue, less than $1 million in institutional funding, and less than 1 million monthly active users.

The license also limits the number of images generated to 6,000 per month. Anyone who needs to exceed those limits must pay for an Enterprise License.

Navigating the situation becomes even more convoluted as developers begin to adapt SD3 to specific use cases.

“The key piece here is that a derivative work is created anytime you train any model, even if it’s not SD3 on outputs from SD3,” explained Kent Keirsey, CEO of InvokeAI, in a YouTube video. “This means that any model trained on outputs from SD3 could be considered a derivative work, subject to the licensing terms with Stability AI having rights over it.”

CivitAI bans SD3

The situation has escalated to the point where CivitAI—the world’s largest repository for Stable Diffusion resources—recently announced a temporary ban on every single resource related to SD3 to avoid potential legal issues with the license.

“Unfortunately, due to a lack of clarity in the license associated with Stable Diffusion 3, we are temporarily banning: All SD3 based models, All models or LoRAs trained on content created with outputs from SD3 based models. This includes utilities such as controlnets,” the statement reads. “The concern is that from our current understanding, this license grants Stability AI too much power over the use of not only any models fine-tuned on SD3, but on any other models that include SD3 images in their datasets.”

CivitAI said that they are seeking legal counsel and reaching out to Stability AI for further clarification on the licensing terms.

Right now, the model and resources remain available on Stability’s own Huggingface repository. The SDXL+SD3 merges and additional resources that were hosted on Civitai’s servers, however, are not available anywhere else right now.

Open source or “open source”?

Other major names in the Stable Diffusion community are raising red flags. The developer of Pony Diffusion, a popular non-photorealistic character-focused model, has also voiced concerns about the lack of clear communication from Stability AI regarding commercial licensing.

“Regrettably, the ambiguous rollout of SD3’s commercial licensing [has] been quite disheartening,” the Pony Diffusion developer stated. “The lack of clear and proactive communication from Stability AI, especially concerning the new model’s commercial use, has left me in the dark as only the non-commercial license of the model was mentioned in [the] initial release announcement.”

The developer said he would “gladly acquire” the new Enterprise License mentioned by Stability AI to access higher limits, but after they “reached out to Stability AI the day the new commercial license was pre-announced… I have not received any acknowledgment or information.”

Another prominent developer, InvokeAI, also revealed that the Stability team has been unwilling to communicate with them substantively. Although some Stability AI staffers have provided informal, non-binding replies assuring users that anyone can fine-tune the model, the overall phrasing of the licensing has developers worried.

For example, the license also operates on a recurring fee basis, meaning that it is active for one month and then ends if the fee is not paid. This could be a problem if other models trained with SD3 outputs are considered derivative works and are thus part of Stability AI’s license. If so, the fee could be perpetually assessed, or the developer’s work would need to be destroyed.

“Upon termination or expiration, each party will return or destroy (or in the case of electronic information, render practically inaccessible) the Confidential Information of the other, including Stability’s Software Products and any Derivative Works,” the license reads.

This stipulation also raises concerns about intellectual property ownership and the ability to build upon existing models, a cornerstone of open-source development.

Keirsey zeroed in on the potential conflict with open-source principles.

“It’s a restrictive license, and it doesn’t solve the underlying value proposition of what open source AI is intended to solve for professionals, which is you own your data you own your intellectual property—and the fine-tuned models that you might create from this—which are derivative works.”

He revealed that a “large majority” of enterprises that have been in communication with Invoke AI are “thinking of staying with SDXL, the predecessor to SD3, for the time being and continuing to fine-tune and train that until such time as a future openly license model is made available.”

Decrypt contacted Stability AI, asking for clarification, but the company said it would be unable to respond in a timely manner. This article will be updated if they subsequently provide additional comment or information.

SD3’s uncertain future

As Keirsey noted, with the latest model from Stablility AI in legal limbo, some developers may opt to stick with SDXL and wait for whatever comes after SD3. Aggressive censorship in SD3 and its inability to generate certain human poses have also played against it.

With Stability AI reeling from the departure of its CEO and layoffs in recent months, its desire to increase revenue to continue operations is understandable. But the need for the company to explain its new SD3 license and how it impacts the work of its large community of developers is pressing.

The controversy has potential implications for the broader AI community and the development of open-source AI models. Nonetheless, SD3 has been downloaded over 2.7 million times from HugginFace —more popular than SDXL Turbo and Stable Cascade—and had over 34,000 hits on Civitai before the ban.

Edited by Ryan Ozawa.

Source: Decrypt

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