OpenAI wins first round against Raw Story and AlterNet copyright case
OpenAI is facing many lawsuits for its use of several publications and book content to train its large language models without express permission or proper compensation. A judge recently dismissed one of them. New York federal judge Colleen McMahon dismissed the lawsuit filed by Green Matter again AlterNetwhich accused the company of using their AI training materials without permission. As VentureBeat they note, however, that their complaint did not argue that OpenAI infringed their copyright as other copyright cases do. Instead, it focuses on the DMCA’s provision that protects “copyright management information.”
The publication argued that OpenAI had removed author names, titles and other metadata identifying their copyrights from the articles it used to train its LLMs. McMahon explained that the plaintiffs failed to show that they suffered “appreciable harm” from those actions and that the damages they had listed “are not the type of damages that have been raised” to warrant a lawsuit. The judge also said that “the likelihood that ChatGPT will release copied content from one of them [their] the articles seem far-fetched.” He added that the plaintiffs are really seeking redress for the use of their articles “to promote ChatGPT without compensation” and not the removal of their copyright management information.
Green Matter again AlterNet they don’t intend to back down, based on what their lawyer says Reuters. Matt Topic, their lawyer, said “they are convinced [they] can address the concerns identified by the court in the amended complaint.”
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