In short
- OpenAi has responded publicly to a May judge to retain all users, including deleted chats.
- The chatgpt -maker says that the move undermines privacy and is not relevant to the lawsuit.
- The New York Times Suit claims that OpenAI has illegally used copyrighted content for training
OpenAI disputes a federal judicial order that requires that it stores all user data, including deleted chats, as part of a copyright lawsuit that has been filed by The New York Times.
“We are strongly convinced that this is an overs range by The New York Times. We continue to appeal against this order, so that we can first continue to put your trust and privacy: “OpenAI COO Brad Lightcap said In a statement.
The decision stems from an order of 13 May to “retain and separate all output log data that would otherwise be removed in the future to further order from the court.”
The New York Times Slagde OpenAi and Microsoft in December 2023, claiming that both companies used illegal time content to train large language models such as Chatgpt and Bing Chat.
Time claims This infringement makes its copyright and threatens the business model of original journalism. Last month said that potential proof of copyright infringement can be removed as users erase their chat history.
The core of the matter is whether the use of copyrighted material to train generative AI models is ‘reasonable use’. The Times claims that the Tools of OpenAI sometimes generate near-Verbatim outputs of his articles and can bypass his Paywall through summaries generated by AI.
Both parties have claimed that they are taking the moral high land. The Times said that it protects journalism and the assets of the media to do his work and be paid for it.
OpenAI CEO Sam Altman has accused The exhaust valve of “On the wrong side of history”, while the company has said time picked the data used in the suit.
As the generative AI industry expands, courts become important battlefields in the battle for data, privacy and intellectual property.
The lawsuit is one of the many controversial copyright claims against OpenAi and other AI companies. In April, Ziff Davis, who owns media such as PCMag and Mashable, sued OpenAi for accusations of the use of his content without permission.
This week, Reddit submitted A lawsuit against another AI company, anthropic, which claimed that the Reddit data has scraped without permission. Anthropic is also confronted with lawsuits of music publishers and authors.
Edited by Sebastian Sinclair
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