The New York Times is said to be weighing a lawsuit against OpenAI over intellectual property infringement behind closed doors.
, per se. Its primary concern is that OpenAI, armed with troves of data scraped from the web and able to churn out text accordingly, is actually a direct competitor. And while it's one thing to have a more traditional competitor — another newspaper, online publishing — it's wholly another to find yourself directly competing with a scraped data-trained plagiarism engine that's likely remixing your reporting, among others', for profit.
points out, if a federal judge were to find that OpenAI had improperly vacuumed up any of the paper's material into its AI training data, the copyright penalties could be incredibly destructive for the AI firm. Federal law mandates that copyright violators can face fines to the tune of $150,000 forinfringement.
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New York Times considers legal action against OpenAI as copyright tensions swirlThe news publisher and maker of ChatGPT have held tense negotiations over striking a licensing deal for the use of the paper's articles to train the chatbot. Now, legal action is being considered.
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The New York Times may sue OpenAI.According to NPR, the two companies have been in talks over a potential licensing agreement, “but the discussions have become so contentious that the paper is now considering legal action.” The NYT recently updated its terms of service to prohibit using its content to train AI models. OpenAI is already mired in other lawsuits.
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