Lawyers for The New York Times are poring through ChatGPT's source code and training material.
It is there to be inspected by lawyers for The New York Times.
The Times' lawyers can share their notes with up to five outside consultants to help them understand what the code does.
That text includes stories from The New York Times, articles from other publications, and an untold number of copyrighted books.
OpenAI similarly used high-quality, well-researched, well-written, and fact-based New York Times articles to make ChatGPT so impressive, the Times argues.
Persons:
morass, —, Sam Altman, Susman Godfrey, Mother Jones, George RR Martin, Jodi Picoult, Nehisi Coates, Kristelia García, Axel Springer, García, OpenAI, Justin Nelson, Godfrey, Nelson, Daniel Ek, Sean Parker, Matthew Sag, poring, Christa Laser
Organizations:
The New York Times, Service, Times, Publishers, Fox News, The New York Daily News, Georgetown University Law, Business, New York Times, Microsoft, Napster, Anthropic, OpenAI, Spotify, Emory University, America, Cleveland State University
Locations:
United States, Manhattan