Artificial intelligence: the press seeks an alternative to looting

2024-01-11 11:52:37

Published on Jan 11, 2024 at 7:08 amUpdated Jan 11, 2024 at 12:52

Will the “New York Times” become a school in France? At the end of December, the American daily filed a complaint for copyright infringement once morest OpenAI, the parent company of consumer artificial intelligence software ChatGPT, and once morest its main investor Microsoft. This January, in Paris, the General Information Press Alliance, Apig, is pursuing the same project for its publishers. “This is the start of the counter-attack,” hopes Pierre Petillault, the general director of Apig. “We will not remain passive,” agrees Julie Lorimy, general director of SEPM, the Union of Magazine Press Editors.

The employers’ organizations are sharpening their weapons and want to convince as many titles as possible to take up the fight. This Thursday, they will bring together publishers and lawyers to prepare for what comes next. It’s urgent. Since its arrival on the Web a little over a year ago, the now famous ChatGPT has freely harvested, without authorization and without financial compensation, all the information put online, to train and respond to Internet users.

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