- Jurisdiction
- US Federal Law
The trillion dollar AI question that has been putting increasing numbers of free Internet content sites behind paywalls is "Can AI developers train their models on copyrighted works without permission under fair use? For decades our terms of use have forbid machines to make use of our content in the way that Artifical Intelligence LLMs (Large Language Models) are exploiting them by consuming our content and the providing answers directly to their visitors, based upon the knowledge shared here, without ever attributing or sending remuneration to the source of that knowledge. It's Grand Theft Autobot.
In re: OpenAI, Inc. Copyright Infringement Litigation (MDL, SDNY) is a consolidated legal action that includes over a dozen copyright plaintiffs (such as the New York Times newspaper), suing OpenAI for copyright infringement and a ruling that what OpenAI and other LLMs do does not fall under the Fair Use Exception to copyright. A recent ruling regarding electronic discovery has OpenAI in a tight space, requiried to disclose millions of ChatGPT logs to the copyright plaintiffs which relate to training the AI model without the permission of the copyright owners. As Jones Walker summarizes:
Earlier in the case, U.S. District Court for the Southern District of New York ruled that the consolidated class action of copyright holders adequately stated a prima facie case for copyright infringement, shutting down OpenAi's attempt to dismiss the action.
The argument of policy and law against finding OpenAI liable is that if they don't engage in what they are doing, other actors outside of the jurisdiction of the court will (such as China.) As such, all the court and legislature would be doing is picking winners that are against the interests of U.S. based companies - those winners being Chinese AI companies such as DeepSeek, Monshot AI, Zhipu AI, and other tech giants with deep pockets.
In re: OpenAI, Inc. Copyright Infringement Litigation (MDL, SDNY) is a consolidated legal action that includes over a dozen copyright plaintiffs (such as the New York Times newspaper), suing OpenAI for copyright infringement and a ruling that what OpenAI and other LLMs do does not fall under the Fair Use Exception to copyright. A recent ruling regarding electronic discovery has OpenAI in a tight space, requiried to disclose millions of ChatGPT logs to the copyright plaintiffs which relate to training the AI model without the permission of the copyright owners. As Jones Walker summarizes:
If plaintiffs demonstrate that ChatGPT routinely generates outputs that compete with or substitute for copyrighted content — even when users aren't specifically requesting plaintiffs' works — OpenAI's fair use defense becomes considerably harder to sustain. OpenAI Loses Privacy Gambit: 20 Million ChatGPT Logs Likely Headed to Copyright Plaintiffs
Earlier in the case, U.S. District Court for the Southern District of New York ruled that the consolidated class action of copyright holders adequately stated a prima facie case for copyright infringement, shutting down OpenAi's attempt to dismiss the action.
The argument of policy and law against finding OpenAI liable is that if they don't engage in what they are doing, other actors outside of the jurisdiction of the court will (such as China.) As such, all the court and legislature would be doing is picking winners that are against the interests of U.S. based companies - those winners being Chinese AI companies such as DeepSeek, Monshot AI, Zhipu AI, and other tech giants with deep pockets.