OpenAI is currently facing multiple copyright lawsuits from various entities including the Authors Guild, New York Times, Daily News, Raw Story Intercept, Getty Images, Sarah Anderson, and Concord Music. These lawsuits allege that OpenAI used their copyrighted materials without permission to train the algorithms behind ChatGPT and other AI systems. In response, OpenAI has released draft guidelines on the responsible behavior of AI technology in ChatGPT and is exploring options to generate explicit content responsibly in age-appropriate contexts.
New: ChatGPT may be getting an adults-only mode. OpenAI is exploring how it can "responsibly provide the ability to generate NSFW content in age-appropriate contexts" https://t.co/V9Dc61Qwz8 via @Knibbs and Reece Rogers
OpenAI released draft guidelines for how it wants the AI technology inside ChatGPT to behave—and revealed that it’s exploring how to ‘responsibly’ generate explicit content. https://t.co/vBJLSSWjNr
OpenAI is fighting lawsuits from artists, writers, and publishers who allege it inappropriately used their work to train the algorithms behind ChatGPT and other AI systems. Now, they're trying to appease them. Here's how: https://t.co/Sjd48FFpGv
Copyright lawsuits against AI companies: OpenAI - Authors Guild, New York Times, Daily News, Raw Story Intercept & more Stability AI - Getty Images, Sarah Anderson Anthropic - Concord music h/t @edleeprof @mkovarski https://t.co/zKdHHB8Swp
In the age of AI, the legal aspects of content creation are under intense scrutiny. The outcomes of ongoing litigations could have a significant impact on the regulation of AI-generated content and the operational strategies of AI companies. Some notable cases in pictures👇 #ai https://t.co/c3EMj36ZN3