Tech giants have been accused of 'mass copyright infringement' and 'system theft' by authors whose work has been used to train generative AI systems such as ChatGPT.
to search Books3 after reporter Alex Reisner identified author information for 183,000 of the 191,000 ISBNs he extracted from the dataset, used to train Meta's LLaMA, Bloomberg's BloombergGPT and EleutherAI's GPT-J.he developed the dataset as a high-quality training resource for other independent developers to allow them to compete with tech giants such as OpenAI, which is believed to have trained ChatGPT using mystery datasets known as Books1 and Books2.
He was disappointed to find one of his books, Machines Behaving Badly: The Morality of AI , in the Books3 dataset. "This has been done disregarding copyright laws, and it's treating authors' works as though they're a public commodity, which ignores the fact that there's a real cost of creation and that licensing is how authors earn a living."
Other lawsuits have been filed against the tech companies by comedian Sarah Silverman and Michael Chabon, who won the 2001 Pulitzer Prize for Fiction for his novel The Amazing Adventures of Kavalier & Clay.In September, a group of high-profile authors, including George RR Martin, Jodi Picoult, John Grisham and Roxane Gay, filed a joint suit with the Authors Guild against OpenAI.
Philippines Latest News, Philippines Headlines
Similar News:You can also read news stories similar to this one that we have collected from other news sources.
‘Absolutely shattering’: AFL Grand Final rule is outright crueltyTaylor Adams’ cruel reality has prompted renewed debate about the AFL’s premiership medal policy.
Read more »
No Australian tax revenue lost in PwC leaks scandal: lawyersLegal inquiries into PwC Australia’s tax leaks scandal have concluded that it did not lead to a “reduction in tax revenues for Australia”.
Read more »
Fireblocks buys Australian blockchain startup BlockFoldFireblocks paid about $15.6 million for BlockFold, a Melbourne-based startup that helps financial institutions build blockchain-based systems.
Read more »
Recruitment and retention ‘a huge challenge’ within Australian armyDefence Minister Richard Marles says recruitment and retention is a 'huge challenge” within the Australian army and a focus of attention in the Defence Strategic Review. Mr Marles said the restructuring of the Australian army will be “part of the solution” in fixing recruitment and retention. The Australian army will see hundreds of Defence Force personnel be relocated from Adelaide to north Queensland. “This is really going to make clear the exciting opportunities that do exist within the army,” he said. Mr Marles said it will “give people a much greater sense of clarity about pathways they can take”. “That we see as something that will actually help recruitment and retention and ultimately start the pathway towards growing the army – which is ultimately what we need to be doing.”
Read more »