The conflict between Openai and the New York Times continues. Since the late 2023, the creator of Chatgpt has been the target of a complaint filed by the Daily American, which accuses him of having used his articles to train his artificial intelligence models. It is in this context that it wants all conversations between chatbot and users to preserve, to which the startup opposes.
“Recently, the NYT asked a court that forces us not to eliminate any discussion of users. We believe that this is an inappropriate request that creates a bad precedent,” said OpenAi’s head, Sam Altman, in X.
“We appeal the decision. We will fight against any request that compromises the confidentiality of our users; this is a fundamental principle,” he added.
“Excessive measurement”
As Operai explains in a blog article, the New York Times wants to force him to maintain all the conversations of the users “based on the speculation that he could find something that supports” his complaint.
Specifies that the data of most users are worried. Free users and payment subscribers (more, professional and equipment). Only Chatgpt Entreprise and Chatgpt Edu clients will not be affected.
The New York Times not only does not want to opt for user conservations with their chatbot, but also wants the beginning to keep those who have been eliminated. Users have the possibility of eliminating discussions, which immediately disappear from their accounts and OpenAi systems in 30 days.
While waiting to obtain his case, the creator of Chatgpt is forced, for a judicial decision, to maintain all the exchanges.
Source: BFM TV
