Major Indian News Outlets Sue OpenAI Over Copyright Violations
Indian digital news companies, led by billionaires Mukesh Ambani and Gautam Adani, have initiated legal proceedings against OpenAI, alleging improper use of copyrighted content from their platforms. The lawsuit, which consolidates the efforts of various news outlets, seeks to address concerns that OpenAI's AI tool, specifically ChatGPT, has unlawfully scraped and reproduced their content without consent.
The filing was submitted to a New Delhi court and includes prominent publishers such as NDTV (owned by Adani) and Network18 (owned by Ambani), as well as regional players like the Indian Express and Hindustan Times. These media organizations argue that OpenAI's practices pose a significant threat to their intellectual property rights, asserting that the technology firm's actions constitute "wilful scraping."
This legal battle intensifies a growing trend worldwide in which media companies and authors are challenging tech firms over the usage of their copyrighted materials for AI training and development. Notably, ANI, a local news agency, initiated the first lawsuit against OpenAI last year, prompting a wave of similar claims from various stakeholders in the publishing industry.
OpenAI has previously denied allegations of copyright infringement, maintaining that its AI systems utilize publicly available data fairly. As of now, OpenAI has not responded to these latest allegations.
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