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Lawyers for The New York Times, the Daily News and other newspapers Tuesday asked a Manhattan judge to reject an effort by OpenAI and Microsoft to dismiss parts of their lawsuits accusing the tech giants of stealing reporters’ stories to train their AI products.
Three publishers' lawsuits against OpenAI and its financial backer Microsoft have been merged into one case. Leading each of the three combined cases are the Times, The New York Daily News and the Center for Investigative Reporting. The hearing on Tuesday ...
A coalition of news organizations led by The New York Times claim the exploitation of their online news stories to train artificial intelligence-driven chatbots amounts to copyright infringement.
The case has merged lawsuits from three publishers: The New York Times, The New York Daily News, and the Center for Investigative Reporting. The publishers argue that OpenAI's practices amount to copyright infringement on a massive scale, potentially threatening the future of journalism.
Presenting its case before the Delhi HC, OpenAI contended that it has "no office or permanent establishment in India".
OpenAI says fair use is a shield that should protect it from this and all copyright lawsuits. But The Times says no way. We should note here that other publishers, including The New York Daily News and the Center For Investigative Reporting have also ...
The New York Daily News and the Center for Investigative Reporting. Other publishers, like the Associated Press, News Corp. and Vox Media, have reached content-sharing deals with OpenAI ...
Leading each of the three combined cases are the Times, The New York Daily News and the Center for Investigative Reporting. The hearing on Tuesday is centered on OpenAI's motion to dismiss ...
A benchmarking controversy exposes industry-wide problems when it turns out OpenAI helped design the test that its vaunted o3 model aced.
A new game of ‘my data center is bigger than yours’ started this week with the announcement of OpenAI’s Project Stargate.
Despite its massive scale, Stargate intends to employ “at least” 57 full-time employees earning an average wage of just $57,600 annually, according to documents seen by Bloomberg regarding the ambitious data center project.