However, the use of AI and chatbots has raised concerns about copyright infringement and the use of training data. The New York Times has filed a lawsuit against OpenAI and Microsoft, alleging that the companies used its copyrighted articles to train the chatbot without permission or compensation. OpenAI argues that training with copyrighted material falls under the category of fair use. The outcome of this lawsuit could have significant implications for the future of AI and copyright law.
Key takeaways:
- Microsoft has announced significant changes to its keyboard design, adding a button for direct access to its AI Copilot tool on new Windows 11 computers. This is part of Microsoft's goal to make generative AI a part of everyday life.
- Companies are increasingly integrating AI into their products and services, with over 230 million smartphones and PCs sold in the US this year expected to use generative AI in some way.
- OpenAI has opened the GPT Store, allowing creators to create customized tools based on its popular ChatGPT chatbot. Over 3 million GPTs have been created so far.
- There are ongoing legal disputes over the use of copyrighted content for training AI systems. The New York Times has filed a lawsuit against OpenAI and Microsoft, claiming that its copyrighted articles were used to train the ChatGPT chatbot without permission or compensation.