Did you know Microsoft and OpenAI Defend AI Training Practices Against Copyright Infringement Lawsuits
In a recent legal proceeding, Microsoft and OpenAI defended their
practice of using large amounts of online news content to train their AI
models. The companies urged the court to dismiss lawsuits from news
organizations like The New York Times and New York Daily News, who
accuse them of copyright infringement.
The publishers claim that
their content is being illegally copied and used by the companies' AI
chatbots. However, OpenAI and Microsoft's legal teams argue that the
lawsuits are too late, as the publishers waited several years after
OpenAI disclosed using their data for AI training.
New York Times’ attorney warned that generative AI could significantly harm news organizations, with a major portion of online traffic potentially shifting away from original news sources.
The judge in the case did not make an immediate ruling but emphasized that the fair use issue would be central to the case. He asked questions about how the AI systems might respond to prompts related to current news events.
The
lawsuits, which began with The New York Times in December 2023, have
since expanded to include additional news organizations. These
publishers claim that content from their websites has been scraped
without permission and used in training large AI models, with the
articles making up a large portion of the data used.
In addition,
the Center for Investigative Reporting (CIR) has filed a lawsuit, and
OpenAI has called the lawsuits "copycat" cases. Before filing the
lawsuits, The New York Times had attempted to negotiate with OpenAI for a
license to use its archives.
Microsoft, which has heavily
invested in AI infrastructure, has also reported significant growth in
its business as it continues to expand its use of artificial
intelligence.