Current:Home > NewsChatGPT-maker braces for fight with New York Times and authors on ‘fair use’ of copyrighted works-LoTradeCoin
ChatGPT-maker braces for fight with New York Times and authors on ‘fair use’ of copyrighted works
View Date:2024-12-24 02:27:15
A barrage of high-profile lawsuits in a New York federal court will test the future of ChatGPT and other artificial intelligence products that wouldn’t be so eloquent had they not ingested huge troves of copyrighted human works.
But are AI chatbots — in this case, widely commercialized products made by OpenAI and its business partner Microsoft — breaking copyright and fair competition laws? Professional writers and media outlets will face a difficult fight to win that argument in court.
“I would like to be optimistic on behalf of the authors, but I’m not. I just think they have an uphill battle here,” said copyright attorney Ashima Aggarwal, who used to work for academic publishing giant John Wiley & Sons.
One lawsuit comes from The New York Times. Another from a group of well-known novelists such as John Grisham, Jodi Picoult and George R.R. Martin. A third from bestselling nonfiction writers, including an author of the Pulitzer Prize-winning biography on which the hit movie “Oppenheimer” was based.
THE LAWSUITS
Each of the lawsuits makes different allegations, but they all center on the San Francisco-based company OpenAI “building this product on the back of other peoples’ intellectual property,” said attorney Justin Nelson, who is representing the nonfiction writers and whose law firm is also representing The Times.
“What OpenAI is saying is that they have a free ride to take anybody else’s intellectual property really since the dawn of time, as long as it’s been on the internet,” Nelson said.
The Times sued in December, arguing that ChatGPT and Microsoft’s Copilot are competing with the same outlets they are trained on and diverting web traffic away from the newspaper and other copyright holders who depend on advertising revenue generated from their sites to keep producing their journalism. It also provided evidence of the chatbots spitting out Times articles word-for-word. At other times the chatbots falsely attributed misinformation to the paper in a way it said damaged its reputation.
One senior federal judge is so far presiding over all three cases, as well as a fourth from two more nonfiction authors who filed another lawsuit last week. U.S. District Judge Sidney H. Stein has been at the Manhattan-based court since 1995 when he was nominated by then-President Bill Clinton.
THE RESPONSE
OpenAI and Microsoft haven’t yet filed formal counter-arguments on the New York cases, but OpenAI made a public statement this week describing The Times lawsuit as “without merit” and saying that the chatbot’s ability to regurgitate some articles verbatim was a “rare bug.”
“Training AI models using publicly available internet materials is fair use, as supported by long-standing and widely accepted precedents,” said a Monday blog post from the company. It went on to suggest that The Times “either instructed the model to regurgitate or cherry-picked their examples from many attempts.”
OpenAI cited licensing agreements made last year with The Associated Press, the German media company Axel Springer and other organizations as offering a glimpse into how the company is trying to support a healthy news ecosystem. OpenAI is paying an undisclosed fee to license AP’s archive of news stories. The New York Times was engaged in similar talks before deciding to sue.
OpenAI said earlier this year that access to AP’s “high-quality, factual text archive” would improve the capabilities of its AI systems. But its blog post this week downplayed the importance of news content for AI training, arguing that large language models learn from an “enormous aggregate of human knowledge” and that “any single data source — including The New York Times — is not significant for the model’s intended learning.”
WHO’S GOING TO WIN?
Much of the AI industry’s argument rests on the “fair use” doctrine of U.S. copyright law that allows for limited uses of copyrighted materials such as for teaching, research or transforming the copyrighted work into something different.
In response, the legal team representing The Times wrote Tuesday that what OpenAI and Microsoft are doing is “not fair use by any measure” because they’re taking from the newspaper’s investment in its journalism “to build substitutive products without permission or payment.”
So far, courts have largely sided with tech companies in interpreting how copyright laws should treat AI systems. In a defeat for visual artists, a federal judge in San Francisco last year dismissed much of the first big lawsuit against AI image-generators. Another California judge shot down comedian Sarah Silverman’s arguments that Facebook parent Meta infringed on the text of her memoir to build its AI model.
The most recent lawsuits have brought more detailed evidence of alleged harms, but Aggarwal said when it comes to using copyrighted content to train AI systems that deliver a “small portion of that to users, the courts just don’t seem inclined to find that to be copyright infringement.”
Tech companies cite as precedent Google’s success in beating back legal challenges to its online book library. The U.S. Supreme Court in 2016 let stand lower court rulings that rejected authors’ claim that Google’s digitizing of millions of books and showing snippets of them to the public amounted to copyright infringement.
But judges interpret fair use arguments on a case-by-case basis and it is “actually very fact-dependent,” depending on economic impact and other factors, said Cathy Wolfe, an executive at the Dutch firm Wolters Kluwer who also sits on the board of the Copyright Clearance Center, which helps negotiate print and digital media licenses in the U.S.
“Just because something is free on the internet, on a website, doesn’t mean you can copy it and email it, let alone use it to conduct commercial business,” Wolfe said. “Who’s going to win, I don’t know, but I’m certainly a proponent for protecting copyright for all of us. It drives innovation.”
BEYOND THE COURTS
Some media outlets and other content creators are looking beyond the courts and calling for lawmakers or the U.S. Copyright Office to strengthen copyright protections for the AI era. A panel of the U.S. Senate Judiciary Committee will hear testimony Wednesday from media executives and advocates in a hearing dedicated to AI’s effect on journalism.
Roger Lynch, chief executive of the Conde Nast magazine chain, plans to tell senators that generative AI companies “are using our stolen intellectual property to build tools of replacement.”
“We believe that a legislative fix can be simple — clarifying that the use of copyrighted content in conjunction with commercial Gen AI is not fair use and requires a license,” says a copy of Lynch’s prepared remarks.
veryGood! (1)
Related
- 'Serial swatter': 18-year-old pleads guilty to making nearly 400 bomb threats, mass shooting calls
- Jussie Smollett says he has 'to move forward' after alleged hate crime hoax
- Fontes blocked from using new rule to certify election results when counties refuse to
- Powerball winning numbers for September 28: Jackpot at $258 million
- Texas’ 90,000 DACA recipients can sign up for Affordable Care Act coverage — for now
- Kailyn Lowry Shares Why She Just Developed a Strategy for Dealing With Internet Trolls
- Exclusive: Kamala Harris campaign launches 'Athletes for Harris'
- No time for shoes as Asheville family flees by boat, fearing they lost everything
- Does your dog have arthritis? A lot of them do. But treatment can be tricky
- How Helene became the near-perfect storm to bring widespread destruction across the South
Ranking
- Jana Kramer’s Ex Mike Caussin Shares Resentment Over Her Child Support Payments
- Minnesota football's Daniel Jackson makes 'Catch of the Year' for touchdown vs Michigan late
- How Helene became the near-perfect storm to bring widespread destruction across the South
- Georgia power outage map: Thousands still without power days after Helene
- Watch: Military dad's emotional return after a year away
- Jalen Milroe, Ryan Williams uncork an Alabama football party, humble Georgia, Kirby Smart
- 'I will never forgive you for this': Whole Foods' Berry Chantilly cake recipe has changed
- 'Say it again': Deion Sanders revels in Colorado's 4-1 start after big win over UCF
Recommendation
-
Jason Kelce Offers Up NSFW Explanation for Why Men Have Beards
-
Handing out MLB's 2024 awards: Shohei Ohtani, Aaron Judge earn MVPs for all-time seasons
-
Kentucky pulls off upset at No. 5 Mississippi with help from gambles by Mark Stoops
-
Sophie Turner Addresses Comments About Being a Single Mother After She Was “Widely Misquoted”
-
'Bizarre:' Naked man arrested after found in crawl space of California woman's home
-
Climate Impacts Put Insurance Commissioner Races in the Spotlight
-
Helene leaves 'biblical devastation' as death toll climbs to 90: Updates
-
Georgia power outage map: Thousands still without power days after Helene