New Pleias 1.0 LLMs trained exclusively on openly licensed data (via) I wrote about the Common Corpus public domain dataset back in March. Now Pleias, the team behind Common Corpus, have released the first family of models that are:
[...] trained exclusively on open data, meaning data that are either non-copyrighted or are published under a permissible license.
There's a lot to absorb here. The Pleias 1.0 family comes in three base model sizes: 350M, 1.2B and 3B. They've also released two models specialized for multi-lingual RAG: Pleias-Pico (350M) and Pleias-Nano (1.2B).
Here's an official GGUF for Pleias-Pico.
I'm looking forward to seeing benchmarks from other sources, but Pleias ran their own custom multilingual RAG benchmark which had their Pleias-nano-1.2B-RAG model come in between Llama-3.2-Instruct-3B and Llama-3.2-Instruct-8B.
The 350M and 3B models were trained on the French government's Jean Zay supercomputer. Pleias are proud of their CO2 footprint for training the models - 0.5, 4 and 16 tCO2eq for the three models respectively, which they compare to Llama 3.2,s reported figure of 133 tCO2eq.
How clean is the training data from a licensing perspective? I'm confident people will find issues there - truly 100% public domain data remains a rare commodity. So far I've seen questions raised about the GitHub source code data (most open source licenses have attribution requirements) and Wikipedia (CC BY-SA, another attribution license). Plus this from the announcement:
To supplement our corpus, we have generated 30B+ words synthetically with models allowing for outputs reuse.
If those models were themselves trained on unlicensed data this could be seen as a form of copyright laundering.
Recent articles
- What happens if AI labs train for pelicans riding bicycles? - 13th November 2025
- Reverse engineering Codex CLI to get GPT-5-Codex-Mini to draw me a pelican - 9th November 2025
- Video + notes on upgrading a Datasette plugin for the latest 1.0 alpha, with help from uv and OpenAI Codex CLI - 6th November 2025