HEADLINES

Microsoft, OpenAI hit with suit by book authors over copyright breach

Nicholas Basbanes, Nicholas Gage assert that the tech giants ‘systematically pilfered’ their work

8:28 AM MYT

 

ISTANBUL – United States-based tech firm Microsoft and artificial intelligence (AI) research company OpenAI were sued by two non-fiction book authors for copyright infringement, Anadolu Agency reported.

Authors Nicholas Basbanes and Nicholas Gage claimed in the suit, filed in a Manhattan federal court yesterday, that their work has been “systematically pilfered” by Microsoft and OpenAI.

The suit, in addition, argued that OpenAI depends on “massive amounts of written material” that includes books written by the authors.

The move comes a week after The New York Times sued OpenAI for billions of dollars in damages for copyright infringement in a suit filed in New York.

The newspaper argued that Microsoft and OpenAI used its content to train the company’s systems and help develop its AI model, since Chat-GPT analyses massive amounts of data online.

OpenAI also faces multiple suits from pop culture figures, such as Game of Thrones author George R.R. Martin and comedian Sarah Silverman, who argue that their work has been used improperly for the company’s AI training. – January 6, 2024

Topics

 

Popular

Petronas staff to be shown the door to make up losses from Petros deal?

Source claims national O&G firm is expected to see 30% revenue loss once agreed formula for natural gas distribution in Sarawak is implemented

‘Very hurtful’: Chief justice exposes legal failures driven by distorted Islamic views

Tun Tengku Maimun Tuan Mat laments misinterpretations of faith that distort justice in high-profile rulings, cites Indira Gandhi and Nik Elin Zurina cases

InDrive faces termination for flouting guidelines

It is the second Russian e-hailing app after Maxim to face ban by Land Public Transport Agency

Related