OpenAI is being sued for copyright infringement by various news sites



It has been revealed that OpenAI, which is being sued by the New York Times for plagiarizing articles by ChatGPT, a generating AI, has recently been sued for copyright infringement by internet media outlets The Intercept, Raw Story, and AlterNet.

Digital Media Outlets Sue OpenAI for Copyright Infringement - The New York Times

https://www.nytimes.com/2024/02/28/technology/openai-copyright-suit-media.html



The Intercept, Raw Story, and AlterNet sue OpenAI and Microsoft - The Verge

https://www.theverge.com/2024/2/28/24085973/intercept-raw-story-alternet-openai-lawsuit-copyright

OpenAI sued by digital news outlets The Intercept, AlterNet, Raw Story | Fortune
https://fortune.com/2024/02/28/openai-lawsuit-digital-media-outlets-intercept-raw-story-alternet/

In 2023, the New York Times, the third-largest newspaper in circulation in the United States, filed a copyright lawsuit against OpenAI, which works on ChatGPT, and Microsoft, which is developing Copilot, an AI service that uses ChatGPT's language model. I filed an infringement suit.

Major daily newspaper The New York Times sues OpenAI and Microsoft for copyright infringement - GIGAZINE



Furthermore, on February 28, 2024, three companies, Raw Story, Alternet, and The Intercept, newly sued OpenAI for copyright infringement. The lawsuits by The Intercept and the other two companies were filed separately in the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York, but they are handled by the same law firm, Loevy & Loevy.

The three plaintiff companies allege that ``OpenAI trained ChatGPT using copyrighted material without properly citing or crediting the article,'' and each violation resulted in a We are asking OpenAI to pay at least $2,500 (approximately 370,000 yen) in damages and to remove the article from the training set.

The Intercept is suing Microsoft as well as OpenAI. On the other hand, Raw Story and Alternet have both signed news contracts and are affiliated with Microsoft, so Microsoft was removed as a defendant.



(PDF file) In its complaint , The Intercept says, ``ChatGPT publishes copyrighted works of journalism without providing information such as the work's author, title, copyright, or terms of use. 'Or they provided users with answers that were reproduced almost verbatim.'

Raw Story and Alternet also note that both OpenAI and Microsoft 'if a user believes that their ChatGPT answers infringe on a third party's copyright or is concerned about further distribution of their ChatGPT answers. 'Defendants had reason to know that ChatGPT's popularity would decline and its revenue would decline,' the complaint states (PDF file) . Both Microsoft and OpenAI offer legal protection services in case a subscriber is sued for copyright infringement.

The New York Times reached out to OpenAI and Microsoft for comment, but neither company responded. Meanwhile, John Byrne, founder and CEO of Raw Story, which owns AlterNet, told the media: ``We are pushing back against Big Tech's continued attempts to force news organizations to play in someone else's loincloth.'' It's time to do it.''

News organizations are not the only ones suing generative AI for copyright infringement. So far, three American authors have sued OpenAI and Meta for copyright infringement, and three AI companies that provide image generation AI Stable Diffusion and Midjourney have filed a class action lawsuit.

A class action lawsuit will be filed against image generation AI 'Stable Diffusion' and 'Midjourney' - GIGAZINE



Although no lawsuit has been filed, the Recording Industry Association of America is requesting authorities to designate Voicify AI, which provides an AI voice model that reproduces human singing voices, as a copyright infringing site.

Recording Industry Association of America requests recognition of AI-based voice cloning service as a copyright infringement site - GIGAZINE

in Software, Posted by log1l_ks