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Encyclopedia Britannica sues OpenAI over AI training
Encyclopaedia Britannica and Merriam-Webster accuse OpenAI of copying nearly 100,000 articles to train ChatGPT, seeking damages and an injunction for copyright and trademark infringement.
- On Friday, Encyclopaedia Britannica and its Merriam-Webster subsidiary filed a lawsuit against OpenAI in Manhattan federal court, alleging the AI giant misused their reference materials to train its artificial intelligence models without permission.
- The complaint alleges OpenAI used nearly 100,000 online articles for its flagship chatbot, ChatGPT, generating AI summaries that 'cannibalized' Britannica's web traffic by diverting users from the publisher's websites.
- Beyond copyright claims, Britannica alleges OpenAI violates the Lanham Act through false hallucinations, while arguing the firm takes a 'free ride' on 'trusted' content, starving it of crucial advertising revenue.
- An OpenAI spokesperson defended the practice on Monday, asserting that 'our models empower innovation' and are trained on publicly available data grounded in fair use standards.
- This litigation joins a growing wave of lawsuits from news outlets and authors against tech companies, though legal precedents remain uncertain whether training large language models on copyrighted content constitutes infringement.
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14 Articles
14 Articles
British states that OpenAI used its articles and verbs to teach ChatGPT chatbot to respond to human requests and "cannibalize" the traffic of the encyclopedia on the web
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Total News Sources14
Leaning Left3Leaning Right2Center4Last UpdatedBias Distribution45% Center
Bias Distribution
- 45% of the sources are Center
45% Center
L 33%
C 45%
R 22%
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