NY Times sues OpenAI, Microsoft for infringing copyrighted works

NY Times sues OpenAI, Microsoft for infringing copyrighted works

The New York Times is taking legal action against OpenAI and Microsoft, claiming they broke copyright rules by using millions of the newspaper’s articles to train their AI models. The lawsuit argues that the AI models, like ChatGPT and Copilot, can produce content that copies, summarizes, and imitates the Times’ writing style. According to the Times, this harms its connection with readers and results in financial losses from subscriptions, licenses, ads, and partnerships.

The complaint suggests that these AI models pose a risk to good journalism by undermining news outlets’ ability to safeguard and make money from their content. The lawsuit claims that through Microsoft’s Bing Chat (now called “Copilot”) and OpenAI’s ChatGPT, the defendants aim to benefit from The Times’ significant investment in journalism without asking for permission or making any payment.

At the same time, the lawsuit asserts that the launch of AI models trained on The Times’ material has been highly profitable for both Microsoft and OpenAI. The publication states that it tried to discuss fair compensation for the use of its content with both companies over several months but was unable to reach an agreement.

The New York Times’ Battle with OpenAI and Microsoft

“We value the rights of content creators and owners and are dedicated to collaborating with them to make sure they gain from AI technology and new ways of generating revenue,” said Lindsey Held, a spokesperson for OpenAI.

“Our ongoing discussions with the New York Times have been positive and are progressing constructively, so we are taken aback and disheartened by this turn of events. We are optimistic about finding a mutually beneficial way to collaborate, as we are already doing with many other publishers.”

The newspaper is taking legal action against both companies, accusing them of copyright infringement. The lawsuit seeks to hold them accountable for “billions of dollars in statutory and actual damages” for supposedly replicating its content. Additionally, it requests the court to stop OpenAI and Microsoft from training their AI models with its content and to remove the Times’ material from the datasets used by the companies.

Read the full story here.

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