- ChatGPT became the fastest-growing consumer application in history
- It has reached 100 million monthly active users in January this year
- The lawsuit requested an unspecified amount of money damages
A group of US authors, including Pulitzer Prize winner Michael Chabon, has sued OpenAI in federal court in San Francisco, accusing the Microsoft-backed program of misusing their writing to train its popular artificial intelligence-powered chatbot ChatGPT. Chabon, playwright David Henry Hwang and authors Matthew Klam, Rachel Louise Snyder, and Ayelet Waldman said in their lawsuit on Friday that OpenAI copied their works without permission to teach ChatGPT to respond to human text prompts.
Chabon's representatives referred queries about the lawsuit
to the writers' lawyers. Those lawyers and representatives for OpenAI did not
immediately respond to requests for comment on Monday. The lawsuit is at least
the third proposed copyright-infringement class action filed by authors against
Microsoft-backed OpenAI. Companies, including Microsoft, Meta Platforms, and
Stability AI, have also been sued by copyright owners over the use of their
work in AI training.
OpenAI and other companies have argued that AI training
makes fair use of copyrighted material scraped from the internet.
ChatGPT became the fastest-growing consumer application in
history earlier this year, reaching 100 million monthly active users in
January, before being supplanted by Meta's Threads app. The new San Francisco
lawsuit said that works like books, plays and articles are particularly
valuable for ChatGPT's training as the "best examples of high-quality,
long-form writing."
The authors alleged that their writing was included in
ChatGPT's training dataset without their permission, arguing that the system
can accurately summarize their works and generate text that mimics their
styles.
The lawsuit requested an unspecified amount of money damages
and an order blocking OpenAI's "unlawful and unfair business
practices."
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