Skip to playerSkip to main content
  • 2 years ago
OpenAI acknowledged in a submission to the UK's House of Lords that it would be "impossible" to create useful AI models like ChatGPT without using copyrighted material. AI models gain abilities from training on large quantities of public Internet content scraped without permission of rights holders. This follows a lawsuit by The New York Times against OpenAI and Microsoft over alleged unlawful use of the newspaper's content. OpenAI asserts its use of public Internet materials for training is fair use under copyright law.
Transcript
00:00 It's Benzinga and here's what's on the block.
00:02 OpenAI acknowledged in a submission to the UK's House of Lords that it would be impossible
00:08 to create useful AI models like ChatGPT without using copyrighted material.
00:14 AI models gain abilities from training on large quantities of public internet content
00:19 scraped without permission of rights holders.
00:22 This follows a lawsuit by the New York Times against OpenAI and Microsoft over alleged
00:26 unlawful use of the newspaper's content.
00:29 OpenAI asserts its use of public internet materials for training is fair use under copyright
00:34 law.
00:35 The company claims fair use is necessary for innovation and critical for US competitiveness.
00:40 For all things money, visit Benzinga.com.
00:42 [BLANK_AUDIO]
Be the first to comment
Add your comment

Recommended