The drama is still ongoing.
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You've probably already heard that OpenAI and Microsoft have been sued by The New York Times for using their content to train its large language model systems. While OpenAI admits that ChatGPT would be impossible without copyrighted content, Microsoft fires back at the claims asking to dismiss them as a false narrative akin to "doomsday hyperbole" and "doomsday futurology".
In attempts to dismiss the case, Microsoft also referred to 1982 congressional testimony and likened the lawsuit to VCR resistance, with the New York Times opposing new technologies like the LLM. Microsoft continues to argue that using content for LLM training doesn't replace the market for original works but serves as language instruction.
Speaking of the copyright dispute, it seems to have become part of a larger trend in AI technology lawsuits, addressing concerns about creative work ownership and the production of deceptive content.
As for now, the drama is still ongoing, and we can only wait and see what happens next.
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