The New York Times Co. sued Microsoft Corp. and OpenAI Inc. for the use of content to help develop artificial intelligence services, in a sign of the increasingly fraught relationship between the media and a technology that could upend the news industry.
The technology firms relied on millions of copyrighted articles to train chatbots like ChatGPT and other AI features, allegedly causing billions of dollars in statutory and actual damages, according to a lawsuit filed in New York on Wednesday. The Times didn’t specify its monetary demands.
Representatives from Microsoft and OpenAI didn’t immediately respond to requests for comment.
OpenAI has faced criticism for scraping text widely from the web to train its popular chatbot since it debuted a year ago, and this is the first lawsuit by a major media organization challenging the practice. The startup has sought licensing deals with publishers, much like Alphabet Inc.’s Google and Meta Platforms Inc.’s Facebook have done in recent years.
In July, OpenAI signed an agreement with the Associated Press to access some of the news agency’s archives. OpenAI cut a three-year deal in December with Axel Springer SE to use the German media company’s work for an undisclosed sum. The Times lawsuit said the publisher reached out to Microsoft and OpenAI in April and could not reach an amicable solution.
OpenAI is currently in talks with investors for new financing at a $100 billion valuation that would make it the second-most valuable US startup, Bloomberg News reported last week.
Microsoft is OpenAI’s largest backer and has deployed the startup’s AI tools in several of its products. In the lawsuit, the New York Times alleged Microsoft copied the newspaper’s articles verbatim for its Bing search engine and used OpenAI’s tech to boost its value by a trillion dollars.
Microsoft’s share price rose 58% over the last year, increasing its market capitalization to $2.78 trillion.
The legal battle
Lawsuit contends that millions of articles published by The Times were used to train automated chatbots
It does not include an exact monetary demand
It also calls for firms to destroy any chatbot models that use copyrighted material from The Times
Complaint cites examples when a chatbot provided users with excerpts from premium Times articles
First Published: Dec 27 2023 | 9:06 PM IST
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