ChatGPT Owner Admits to Needing Copyrighted Material to Train Its AI Tools

ChatGPT Owner Admits to Needing Copyrighted Material to Train Its AI Tools

Books



ChatGPT Owner Admits to Needing Copyrighted Material to Train Its AI Tools

OpenAI — the developer of ChatGPT, a chatbot that shook things up in 2023 — has said that it would not be able to train its tools and products without having access to copyrighted materials in a statement made to the House of Lords communications and digital select committee.

In its statement, OpenAI stated that not being able to use copyrighted materials for training “would not provide AI systems that meet the needs of today’s citizens.”

This comes after a number of lawsuits. Fall last year, about 20 authors sued OpenAI for copyright infringement, and just last month, the New York Times sued Open AI and Microsoft for the same thing. OpenAI has made a statement on the New York Times suit on its site, saying that they “believe the New York Times lawsuit is without merit.”

Find more news and stories of interest from the book world in Breaking in Books.



View Original Source Here

Articles You May Like

Scarlett Johansson Reacts to Colin Jost’s NSFW Joke About Her on SNL
The Weeknd’s New Movie Hurry Up Tomorrow, Starring Jenna Ortega and Barry Keoghan, Gets 2025 Release Date
Jared Leto Playing Skeletor in Live Action ‘Masters of the Universe’
The Fate of Tell Me Lies Season 3 Revealed
My Favorite Movie Of 2024 Is Almost Too Bizarre To Recommend, Unless You Have The Same Twisted Sense Of Humor That I Do