The New York Times filed a lawsuit against ChatGPT and Microsoft for copying news The New York Times has filed a lawsuit against ChatGPT maker OpenAI and Microsoft. The New York Times filed a lawsuit in the US Federal District Court in Manhattan on Wednesday, saying that these companies copied millions of articles and trained chatbots to provide immediate information to the general public through AI.
The New York Times claimed to be the first American media outlet to file a lawsuit against the ChatGPT maker for allegedly training an AI tool using published news.
According to the New York Times, this case is not about asking for money in the form of compensation, but for the accused company to be responsible for paying a large amount of money (which could be billions of dollars).
The company has demanded not only to pay compensation but also to remove the chatbot itself. The New York Times filed its lawsuit against Microsoft and OpenAI in April.
We are committed to them benefiting from the new model,” he wrote. “We are hopeful that we will find new ways to collaborate for the betterment of all. We are working with other publishers in the same way.” Microsoft has not given any opinion on this.
If Microsoft were to improve their service and facilities, then the people would get on it. Most users will use AI tools to further make a lot of things, but people will be given the wrong information when news is published.
Both Microsoft and ChatGPT will be making rules against government policy to follow up. Both of them are doing the same work to process the wrong message that will be published on their website.

