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These 3 news organizations sue Microsoft and OpenAI for copyright infringement
The lawsuits are just some of the many.
3 min. read
Published onFebruary 29, 2024
published onFebruary 29, 2024
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The Intercept, Raw Story, and AlterNet sued Microsoft and OpenAI inseparate lawsuitsin the Southern District of New York, all litigated by the same law firm, reportsThe Verge.
The Intercept lawsuit which can be viewed online, claims that ChatGPT reproduces news articles nearly verbatim from works of journalists without mentioning their names.
At least some of the time, ChatGPT provides or has provided responses to users that regurgitate verbatim or nearly verbatim copyright-protected works of journalism without providing author, title, copyright, or terms of use information contained in those works.
At least some of the time, ChatGPT provides or has provided responses to users that mimic significant amounts of material from copyright-protected works of journalism without providing any author, title, copyright, or terms of use information contained in those works. For example, if a user asks ChatGPT about a current event or the results of a work of investigative journalism, ChatGPT will provide responses that mimic copyright-protected works of journalism that covered those events, not responses that are based on any journalism efforts by Defendants.
On the other hand,Raw Story and AlterNet’s lawsuitsays Microsoft and OpenAI would be aware that ChatGPT would have been less popular if users knew it violated third-party copyrights.
Defendants had reason to know that ChatGPT would be less popular and would generate less revenue if users believed that ChatGPT responses violated third-party copyrights or if users were otherwise concerned about further distributing ChatGPT responses. This is at least because Defendants were aware that they derive revenue from user subscriptions, that at least some likely users of ChatGPT respect the copyrights of others or fear liability for copyright infringement, and that such users would not pay to use a product that might result in copyright liability or did not respect the copyrights of others.
This is not the first time Microsoft has seen itself in this situation. In the last months of 2023,The New York Timessued the Redmond-based tech giant and OpenAI, for using their published works to train the AI models.
However, both Microsoft and OpenAI announced theywill pay any legal coversif any of their users find themselves in a situation where copyright infringement is involved due to ChatGPT or Copilot.
Microsoft and OpenAI are no strangers to copyright infringement accusations, and the new lawsuits are once again opening up discussions about the ethics of using AI to report on news or generate content.
More about the topics:microsoft,OpenAI
Flavius Floare
Tech Journalist
Flavius is a writer and a media content producer with a particular interest in technology, gaming, media, film and storytelling.
He’s always curious and ready to take on everything new in the tech world, covering Microsoft’s products on a daily basis. The passion for gaming and hardware feeds his journalistic approach, making him a great researcher and news writer that’s always ready to bring you the bleeding edge!
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Flavius Floare
Tech Journalist
Flavius is a writer and a media content producer with a particular interest in technology, gaming, media, film and storytelling.