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Microsoft compares The New York Times' claims against OpenAI to Hollywood's early fight against VCR

Denis Balibouse | Reuters

Executive Chairman and CEO of Microsoft Corporation Satya Nadella attends a session during the 54th annual meeting of the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland, on Jan. 16, 2024.

  • Microsoft is helping OpenAI fight back against claims of copyright infringement by The New York Times.
  • The news outlet's lawsuit, filed in December, seeks to hold Microsoft and OpenAI accountable for billions of dollars in damages.
  • In a court filing on Monday, Microsoft accuses the publisher of "unsubstantiated" claims that use of OpenAI's technology is harming its business.

Microsoft is accusing The New York Times of "unsubstantiated" claims in the publisher's lawsuit filed in December against OpenAI, a case that could have major implications for the future of generative artificial intelligence.

In a motion to dismiss part of the suit on Monday, Microsoft said the Times presented a false narrative of "doomsday futurology" in which OpenAI's ChatGPT chatbot will decimate the news business. In the opening line of its argument to the court, Microsoft compares the lawsuit to Hollywood's resistance to the VCR, which was created in the 1970s and allowed users to record television programs.

"In this case, The New York Times uses its might and its megaphone to challenge the latest profound technological advance: the Large Language Model," attorneys for Microsoft wrote. Microsoft is OpenAI's largest investor, having pumped about $13 billion into the startup.

The filing marks the latest salvo in the battle between OpenAI and the media industry, which is increasingly concerned that AI models are being trained on valuable content that has been produced over many decades. In its lawsuit, the Times accused OpenAI and Microsoft of copyright infringement and abusing the newspaper's intellectual property in training LLMs.

OpenAI previously asked a judge to dismiss parts of the Times' lawsuit against it, alleging that the publisher "paid someone to hack OpenAI's products," such as ChatGPT, to generate 100 examples of copyright infringement for its case. OpenAI claimed it took the Times "tens of thousands of attempts to generate the highly anomalous results," and that the company did so using "deceptive prompts that blatantly violate OpenAI's terms of use."

In the latest filing, Microsoft's lawyers argue that "content used to train LLMs does not supplant the market for the works, it teaches the models language."

"Microsoft doesn't dispute that it worked with OpenAI to copy millions of The Times's works without its permission to build its tools. Instead, it oddly compares LLMs to the VCR even though VCR makers never argued that it was necessary to engage in massive copyright infringement to build their products," Ian Crosby, Susman Godfrey partner and lead counsel for The New York Times, said in a statement to CNBC.

He added, "In spite of Microsoft's protestations about how The Times described in detail the unprecedented theft of copyrighted works by the defendants, the bottom line is that The Times looked for its stolen works and found them. Microsoft now blames The Times for bringing this to light as an excuse for their and OpenAI's wrongdoing."

Since releasing ChatGPT to the public in late 2022, OpenAI has become one of the hottest startups on the planet, with a valuation reportedly over $80 billion.

Bloomberg | Bloomberg | Getty Images
Sam Altman, CEO of OpenAI, during a panel session at the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland, on Jan. 18, 2024.

OpenAI has recently acknowledged that it's "impossible" to train top AI models without copyrighted works.

"Because copyright today covers virtually every sort of human expression—including blog posts, photographs, forum posts, scraps of software code, and government documents—it would be impossible to train today's leading AI models without using copyrighted materials," OpenAI wrote in a filing last month in the U.K., in response to an inquiry from the U.K. House of Lords.

As recently as January, in Davos, Switzerland, OpenAI CEO Sam Altman said he was "surprised" by the Times' lawsuit, saying OpenAI's models didn't need to train on the publisher's data.

"We actually don't need to train on their data," Altman said at an event organized by Bloomberg in Davos. "I think this is something that people don't understand. Any one particular training source, it doesn't move the needle for us that much."

OpenAI has struck deals with Axel Springer, the German media conglomerate that owns Business Insider, Morning Brew and other outlets, and is also reportedly in talks with CNN, Fox Corp. and Time to license their work.

CNBC's Sam Meredith contributed to this report.

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