Please create an account to participate in the Slashdot moderation system

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×
The Courts News

Indian News Agency Sues OpenAI Alleging Copyright Infringement (techcrunch.com) 5

One of India's largest news agencies, Asian News International, has sued OpenAI in a case that could set a precedent for how AI companies use copyrighted news content in the world's most populous nation. From a report: Asian News International filed a 287-page lawsuit in the Delhi High Court on Monday, alleging the AI company illegally used its content to train its AI models and generated false information attributed to the news agency. The case marks the first time an Indian media organization has taken legal action against OpenAI over copyright claims.

Indian News Agency Sues OpenAI Alleging Copyright Infringement

Comments Filter:
  • by schwit1 ( 797399 ) on Tuesday November 19, 2024 @02:47PM (#64958179)

    This seems like a losing battle for copyright holders. Only the high profile AIs will abide by copyright restrictions.

    • Only the high profile AIs will abide by copyright restrictions.

      Even if this happens (doubtful), the issue here isn't just copyright:

      alleging the AI company illegally used its content to train its AI models and generated false information attributed to the news agency

      So the AI stated falsehoods (ie. "hallucinated"), then said those falsehoods were from the news agency, which never put out those falsehoods.

      Defamation much?

      • Defamation much?

        As a plain understanding -Yes. A false statement was disseminated to a third party, which being attributed to the news agency, could cause harm to their reputation.

        As a legal standard -No. Either "actual malice" or "negligence" would need to be established.

        "actual malice" means that the defendant made the defamatory statement "with knowledge that it was false or with reckless disregard of whether it was false or not."

        "negligence" involves five elements:
        -The existence of a legal duty that the defendant owe

    • This seems like a losing battle for copyright holders.

      The hacker's (and Slashdot's) rallying cry used to be "Information wants to be free!". This seems to have been turned completely around when talking about using the information for training AI.

      Sic transit gloria mundi, innit?

"Free markets select for winning solutions." -- Eric S. Raymond

Working...