OpenAI aims to deter said organization like NDTV, Network 18, The India Express, Hindustan Times, and the Digital News Publishers Association that OpenAI scraped that is automatically collected their news content without their consent. The petition to join against the chatGPT maker was filed in Delhi High Court last month by these media outlets.
OpenAI argues that it is not legally obliged to reach any kind of partnership agreements with media groups to utilize contents from public domain. OpenAI has denied all claims, stating that it has not used content from ANI, the other media applicants or any of the Digital News Publishers Association (DNPA) members to train its AI models. The controversy started when, last year, the Indian news agency ANI filed a suit against OpenAI, claiming that the company had used published works without permission to train ChatGPT.
At that time, an OpenAI spokeperson said that they build a AI models with publicly available data in accordance with fair use and similar principles, backed by longstanding, widely accepted legal precedent, and the federation of Indian publishers petitioned for immediate cessation of copyright infringement caused by Open AI's access to protected work books and online content. Either the company agrees to rush its licensing agreements for the works in suit or delete the datasets used to train its AI model. An author representative from the FIP was recently quoted, saying its members will be taking steps to protect their works from unauthorized use in machine learning, if negotiations fail, members may seek court ordered injunctions. Furthermore, some publishers, most recently including the New York Times Microsoft and OpenAI for copyright infringement, have accused the two companies of using their content to train models without consent.
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