Two authors filed a lawsuit against OpenAI last week alleging that their copyrighted books were used to train the company's artificial intelligence chatbot, ChatGPT, without their consent.
They allege the summaries are "only possible" if ChatGPT was trained on their books, which would be a violation of copyright law.
OpenAI doesn't reveal what precise data was used for training ChatGPT, but the company said it generally crawled the web, including the use of archived books and Wikipedia.
The complaint references exhibits of the summaries that ChatGPT generated, and it notes that the chatbot gets some things wrong.
"At no point did ChatGPT reproduce any of the copyright management information Plaintiffs included with their published works," the complaint said.
Persons:
OpenAI, Paul Tremblay, Mona Awad, ChatGPT, Tremblay, Awad, Sam Altman
Organizations:
Microsoft, San
Locations:
San Francisco, San Francisco federal