A federal judge has thrown out a lawsuit filed by two news outlets
who accused San Francisco-based OpenAI of misusing their copyrighted content to train its artificial intelligence (AI) chatbot ChatGPT.
U.S. District Judge Colleen McMahon of the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of New York dismissed the complaint filed by
Raw Story and
AlterNet on Nov. 7. The magistrate sided with OpenAI's motion to dismiss the complaint in its entirety, according to the
National Pulse.
McMahon argued that
the plaintiffs failed to demonstrate a concrete injury required for legal standing under Article Three of the U.S. Constitution. The plaintiffs were unable to show actual harm from OpenAI's alleged violation of the Digital Millennium Copyright Act (DMCA) by failing to provide specific instances of ChatGPT reproducing their content without acknowledgement. The likelihood of such occurrences were "remote," she continued.
"Given the quantity of information contained in the repository, the likelihood that ChatGPT would output plagiarized content from one of plaintiffs' articles seems remote. Plaintiffs have nowhere alleged that the information in their articles is copyrighted, nor could they do so," McMahon explained. According to the federal judge, the plaintiffs' true grievance appeared to be the unlicensed use of their articles without compensation rather than the removal of copyright management information (CMI).
"The decision is one of the first major legal wins for an AI company facing copyright infringement allegations from news publishers,"
Newsweek wrote. (Related:
OpenAI disbands team dedicated to addressing AI DANGERS.)
Plaintiffs could still appeal the case dismissal
Raw Story Media (RSM) – parent company of
Raw Story and
AlterNet – filed the case in February. It alleged that the company led by Sam Altman contravened Section 1202(b)(1) of the DMCA, which deals with CMI. RSM accused OpenAI of removing CMI from numerous
Raw Story and
AlterNet articles during the ChatGPT training process.
RSM sought damages of at least $2,500 per violation and demanded that its content be removed from OpenAI's datasets. Meanwhile, the AI firm asserted that its use of publicly accessible data is protected under fair use rules.
"The dismissal may influence similar cases, as OpenAI and other AI firms face numerous lawsuits over the data utilized in training generative AI systems," the
Pulse reported. "These include actions from prominent publishers like the
New York Times, alleging unauthorized use of articles for AI development."
RSM CEO and founder John Byrne said at the time of the lawsuit's filing: "It is time that news organizations fight back against Big Tech's continued attempts to monetize other people's work. For 20 years, Raw Story has spent millions of dollars in efforts to help Americans make important decisions about their leaders and their lives. Big Tech has decimated journalism. It's time that publishers take a stand."
Despite the case's dismissal, the two news outlets still have the option of repleading. McMahon herself expressed openness to hear an amended complaint, though she was skeptical that
Raw Story and
AlterNet could prove that OpenAI caused a tangible injury.
Byrne confirmed that the news outlets will lodge an appeal. "We do intend to continue the case," he said. "We're confident that we can address the court's concerns in an amended complaint."
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Sources are:
TheNationalPulse.com
Newsweek.com
Brighteon.com