
The legal application seen by Reuters shows that Openai is seeking to prevent media groups from entering the copyright lawsuit against U.S. companies, including Gautam Adani and Mukesh Ambani, from joining the copyright lawsuit against U.S. companies, saying it does not use its content to train Chatgpt.
The Microsoft-backed company said it was the first time submitted by Reuters’ 31-page OpenAi Courting, a partnership with media groups to take advantage of publicly available content.
The document involves a lawsuit last year by the Indian news agency ANI, which accused Chatgpt of using its published content without permission to help train its AI chatbots. Since then, book publishers and media groups in India have united to join the litigation process.
Adani’s Tech Word News, India Express, Times of India and Digital News Publishers Association (DNPA), representing many people, including Ambani Network, claims OpenAI is using its news website to scratch content and reproduce their work on Chatgpt.
Openai’s filing dated February 11, the document said the company denied that it “used any applicant or membership content from DNPA” to train its AI model.
Openai and his attorneys did not immediately respond to Reuters’ request for comment. The DNPA and other news outlets did not immediately respond to Reuters’ request for comment.
“We have built our AI models using publicly available data and are protected by fair use and related principles, and are supported by long-term and widely accepted legal precedents,” Openai said in a statement.
Courts around the world are listening to listen claims from authors, news organizations and musicians who alleged that technology companies are using their copyrighted work to train AI services without permission or payment.
Openai has signed deals with many news publishers around the world to display content. But Indian groups claimed in their legal opinion that U.S. companies have not yet reached a similar deal in India.
Openai’s documents say its other partnerships abroad are not “a licensing arrangement to train its AI models” at all. The company also stated that the use of content is allowed under Indian copyright law (publicly available).
Last week, Openai Chief Sam Altman visited India during an Asian tour and met with India’s IT minister in New Delhi and discussed the country’s plans to create a low-cost AI ecosystem.
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(This story has not been edited by Tech Word News’s staff and is automatically generated from the joint feed.)