OpenAI Disputes Claims That It Trained ChatGPT With Material From Indian Media

OpenAI Disputes Claims That It Trained ChatGPT With Material From Indian Media
OpenAI Denies Using Indian Media Content to Train ChatGPT

Major Indian media organisations have attempted to join a copyright case against OpenAI, the firm behind the well-known AI chatbot ChatGPT, but OpenAI is retaliating. A media report claims that the company has contended in a recent court filing that it is not required to sign into licensing agreements with Indian media companies and does not utilise their content to educate ChatGPT. Media companies owned by prominent figures like Mukesh Ambani and Gautam Adani are among the Indian media groups that have alleged OpenAI for using their content without any license or agreement.

 In a 31-page court filing, OpenAI denied allegations that it uses content from its website to train its artificial intelligence model. The filed documents are a reaction to a lawsuit filed by a well-known Indian news organisation. The latter claims that OpenAI has copied its news articles without permission.

Indian Media Joining Forces to Fight with AI Giant

The case was filed by ANI in November 2023. A group of Indian publications has joined the action, including the Digital News Publications Association (DNPA), which represents Ambani's Network1, The Indian Express, Hindustan Times, and NDTV (owned by Adani). These media outlets have accused OpenAI of using their websites to train ChatGPT by unauthorizedly scraping content.

The lawsuit filed by ANI is demanding damages of 20 million rupees ($230,000), according to a report from an international media outlet. This is the first legal obstacle that OpenAI has faced in the Indian market, which is also the company's second-largest market. The case may have a significant impact on how AI businesses manage Indian internet content. In its legal response, OpenAI has insisted that it does not rely on information from the Indian media groups involved in this lawsuit and that it trains its AI models using publicly available data.

Open AI Navigating to Troubled Waters

Since November 2022, when OpenAI began making ChatGPT accessible to the public, the company has been the subject of allegations from a variety of sources that the AI chatbot was trained using copyrighted content. Eight American newspapers, including The New York Times, The New York Daily News, The Chicago Tribune, The Denver Post, and others, are suing Microsoft and OpenAI, claiming that ChatGPT trained the chatbot on copyrighted news stories without authorisation or payment.

Five of Canada's most well-known news organisations also brought a similar copyright infringement action against OpenAI, according to a media report. OpenAI OpenAI has defended its conduct by asserting that it is "impossible" to develop practical AI models like ChatGPT without using copyrighted material and that its usage of copyrighted materials is in accordance with "fair use" rules. Please check Indiatimes News for other global news and current events.


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