HomeNewsTechnologyLawsuit says OpenAI violated US authors' copyrights to train AI chatbot

Lawsuit says OpenAI violated US authors' copyrights to train AI chatbot

Massachusetts-based writers Paul Tremblay and Mona Awad said ChatGPT mined data copied from thousands of books without permission, infringing the authors’ copyrights.

June 29, 2023 / 21:02 IST
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Several legal challenges have been filed over material used to train cutting-edge AI systems.
Several legal challenges have been filed over material used to train cutting-edge AI systems.

Two U.S. authors sued OpenAI in San Francisco federal court on Wednesday, claiming in a proposed class action that the company misused their works to ”train” its popular generative artificial-intelligence system ChatGPT.

Massachusetts-based writers Paul Tremblay and Mona Awad said ChatGPT mined data copied from thousands of books without permission, infringing the authors’ copyrights.

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Matthew Butterick, an attorney for the authors, declined to comment. Representatives for OpenAI, a private company backed by Microsoft Corp, did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

Several legal challenges have been filed over material used to train cutting-edge AI systems. Plaintiffs include source-code owners against OpenAI and Microsoft’s GitHub, and visual artists against Stability AI, Midjourney and DeviantArt.