OpenAI: Copyrighted material is crucial for training AI chatbots


What you need to know

  • OpenAI has found itself in the corridors of justice after being slapped with multiple lawsuits over copyright infringement.
  • The company admits that it’s impossible to create AI chatbots without using copyrighted material from the internet.
  • It highlighted that copyright law doesn’t forbid training while making its submission.

While the OpenAI’s fiasco that led to its board of directors to stripe Sam Altman of his position at the company as CEO is out of the way, the company can’t catch a break as more trouble is seemingly brewing. As 2023 came to an end, The New York Times publicly announced its plans to sue Microsoft and OpenAI over AI unfairly using its copyrighted material, which negatively impacted the outlet monetarily.

Recently joining the fray, two non-fiction authors filed a class-action lawsuit against Microsoft and OpenAI for intellectual property theft, further staking a claim of $150,000 as restitution for damages. For those unaware, AI-powered chatbots like OpenAI’s ChatGPT or Microsoft’s Copilot (formerly Bing Chat) heavily steal rely on already existing information and resources from the internet (predominantly from websites) for training purposes. 





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