Indian media giants owned by Mukesh Ambani and Gautam Adani are uniting against OpenAI, as per a Reuters report. This lawsuit, involving major news players, challenges OpenAI’s use of scraped content from Indian news websites.
The new tool, called Operator, can shop for groceries or book a restaurant reservation. But it still needs help from humans.
In three consolidated suits, publishers allege that OpenAI broke copyright law by copying millions of articles without permission or payment. OpenAI counters that the fair use doctrine protects them.
Lawyers for the New York Daily News, The New York Times, and other newspapers Wednesday asked a Manhattan judge to reject an effort by OpenAI and Microsoft to dismiss parts of their lawsuits
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 ...
A group of news organizations, led by The New York Times, took ChatGPT maker OpenAI to federal court on Tuesday in a hearing that could determine whether the tech company has to face the ...
The new agreement “includes changes to the exclusivity on new capacity, moving to a model where Microsoft has a right of first refusal (ROFR),” Microsoft says. “To further support OpenAI, Microsoft has approved OpenAI’s ability to build additional capacity, primarily for research and training of models.”
Hindustan Times digital arm (HT Digital Streams), the Indian Express digital wing (IE Online Media Services Private Limited), NDTV Convergence, and the Digital News Publishers Association (DNPA) allege that OpenAI has violated intellectual property (IP) rights.
By Aditya Kalra, Arpan Chaturvedi and Praveen ParamasivamNEW DELHI (Reuters) - Digital news units of Indian billionaires Gautam Adani and Mukesh Ambani, and other outlets including the Indian Express and the Hindustan Times,
Here's what OpenAI's o1 had to say about AI trends this year. Just how many there are is a testament to AI’s general-purpose value.
OpenAI, led by Sam Altman, is facing a copyright lawsuit in India filed by the Federation of Indian Publishers and international publishers. The lawsuit contends that OpenAI used copyrighted literary works without permission to train its AI,