Artificial intelligence and copyright Microsoft and OpenAI sued – Morocco

Artificial intelligence and copyright: Microsoft and OpenAI sued – Morocco diplomacy

Artificial intelligence and copyright Microsoft and OpenAI sued – Morocco

Two New York novelists decided Friday to sue Microsoft and OpenAI for using their work without permission to train the artificial intelligence models behind ChatGPT and other AI-based services.

Authors Nicholas Basbanes and Nicholas Gage told the federal court in Manhattan on Friday that the companies violated their copyrights by including several of their books in the data used to train OpenAI's advanced GPT language model.

Last week, The New York Times filed a lawsuit against the two companies for copyright infringement, pointing out that the two companies' AI technology illegally copied millions of articles from the daily newspaper to develop ChatGPT and other services that provide instant Enable access to information.

A large number of actors, writers, journalists and other content creators who publish their works on the Internet fear that AI will benefit from their work to provide competitive chatbots and other sources of information without adequate compensation.

At the end of October, American President Joe Biden signed an executive order to regulate artificial intelligence and limit the risks associated with this technology.

The executive order includes new security assessments, equity and civil rights guidance, and research on the impact of AI on the labor market. The text builds on voluntary commitments the White House previously sought from major AI companies and represents the first major binding government action on the technology.

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