“Five Canadian news media companies filed a lawsuit Friday against ChatGPT’s owner, OpenAI, accusing the artificial intelligence developer of regularly violating copyrights and the Internet’s terms of use.”, — write: epravda.com.ua
Five Canadian news media companies filed a lawsuit Friday against ChatGPT’s owner, OpenAI, accusing the artificial intelligence developer of regularly violating copyrights and the Internet’s terms of use. This is reported by Reuters. The case is part of a wave of lawsuits against OpenAI and other tech companies by authors, artists, music publishers and other copyright holders over data used to train generative artificial intelligence systems. Torstar, Postmedia, The Globe and Mail, The Canadian Press and CBC/Radio-Canada said in a statement that OpenAI is extracting large amounts of content to develop its products without obtaining permission or compensating the content owners.Advertisement: “Journalism is public interest. Using OpenAI journalism for their own commercial gain is not. It’s illegal,” they said.Advertisement: A New York federal judge On Nov. 7, dismissed a lawsuit against OpenAI that claimed it misused articles from the news sites Raw Story and AlterNet. In an 84-page lawsuit filed in Ontario Superior Court, the five Canadian companies sought damages and a permanent injunction against OpenAI from using their material without their consent. In response, OpenAI said its models were trained on publicly available data based on fair use and related international copyright principles that are fair to authors. Reminder: Major music labels and global artists sign letters against AI and file lawsuits against AI that generates music.