Written by Samah Labib Sunday, January 7, 2024 01:00 AM
Last November, a group of non-fiction authors filed a lawsuit accusing OpenAI and Microsoft of using other people’s intellectual property without permission to train the former’s generative AI technology, according to a engadget report.
More non-fiction writers are now suing companies for using their work To train large language models GPT of OpenAI (LLM), while journalists Nicholas A. Pasbanis and Nicholas Gage are accused of “massive and willful theft of copyrighted works” by writers they represented in a proposed class action lawsuit.
Professional writers “have limited capital to fund their research” and “usually self-fund their projects,” they said in their complaint.
Meanwhile, the defendants had “ready access to billions of dollars in capital” and “simply stole” the plaintiffs’ copyrighted works to build another commercial industry worth more than $1 billion, they allege.
The complaint says that using copyrighted works is a “deliberate strategy” by the companies, and not paying writers gives the defendants “a higher profit margin.” The plaintiffs added that the companies could have explored alternative financing options, such as profit-sharing, but “decided to steal ” Instead of that.
Pasbanis and Gage seek to “represent a class of writers whose copyrighted works have been systematically stolen” by the defendants, and are seeking damages of up to $150,000 per infringed work, as well as a permanent injunction “to prevent such damages from recurring.” “. Pasbanis is a “renowned authority on the history of books and book culture.” According to CNBC, Gage previously worked at the Times and the Wall Street Journal.
OpenAI faces a growing list of lawsuits filed by creators accusing it of using their work without permission to train its law master’s students, including a lawsuit by fantasy authors George R.R. Martin, John Grisham, and Jodi Picoult.
In late December 2023, The New York Times filed a lawsuit against the company and its largest backer, Microsoft, for using the newspaper’s articles for artificial intelligence training.
An OpenAI representative told us at the time that both parties were engaged in “productive conversations” and that the lawsuit was unexpected.
2024-01-06 23:00:00
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