Great technology giants like Google and Chatgpt Maker Openai are seeing a “license to steal” while pushing the White House to allow them to train them in copyright protected materials without proper compensation, one of the largest in the country.
More than 60 ownership newspapers Alden Global Capital-Whose include the New York Daily News, Chicago Tribune and Denver Post-posted an editorial on Monday demanding that the Trump administration refuse “self-serving proposals” that can destroy the news industry.
“Gutting generations of copyright protection for the benefit of the bots would have a cold effect not only on news organizations, but also on all creators of creative content, from novelists to playwrights to poets,” the editorial said.
“This engagement wearing iron to protect the rights of the work owners they themselves created is exactly what distinguishes the United States from communist China, not the opposite.”
Prayer came a few days after Google and Sam Altman led by Open argued with letters sent to the Trump administration so that copyright laws-which are essential for newspapers and other content creators from stopping others to renounce race
Big Tech’s request was also contemptuous by a coalition of Hollywood high-profile actors, including renowned Trump critics such as Mark Ruffalo and Olivia Wilde, who urged the White House to ensure that copyright protections remain in place.
“We firmly believe that the global leadership of America should not come to the expense of our essential creative industries,” the letter signed by more than 400 Hollywood makers said.
“He is seeking to undermine this economic and cultural force by weakening copyright protection for movies, television series, artwork, writing, music and voices used to train models at the core of multi -billion dollars corporate estimates,” letters added.
The post arrived at the White House for comment.
Openai and Google did not immediately return the posting request for comment.
Big Tech proposals were submitted in response to the White House request Trump for the “action plans” related to the one that can be used to form the federal regulation.
Openai linked her argument about the release of copyright legally to national security – claiming that the US risked losing the race in China if they did not return the defense.
“The federal government can provide both the freedom of Americans to learn from him, and Avaid lose our superiority in the PRC while maintaining the ability of US models to learn from copyright protected material,” said Microsoft -backed company.
Meanwhile, Google pushed what he called “balanced copyright rules” that would allow companies and to train their models in protected work.
“These exceptions allow the use of copyright protected material, publicly available for training, without significant influential rights and Avaid often very unpredictable, unbalanced and long negotiations with data holders during model development or scientific experimentation.
Industry lawyers, such as the news alliance-a nonprofit representing more than 2,200 publishers, including a long argued that chatbots he trained in copyright protected articles without credit or payments can cause “catastrophic” damage to the publishers set in cash.
In its submission to the White House, the news media alliance noted that copyright protected industries “contributed $ 2.09 trillion to the US GDP, have nearly 8% of the US economy.”
“He’s companies rely on Chinese business practice long criticized for the rampant violation of copyright to argue that we in America must abandon our historical commitment to protect and promote the development of intellectual property,” the group said.
“This method of argument suggests that the American one cannot compete without violating our laws. Nothing can be farther away from the truth.”
Some newspapers owned by Alden are currently suing Openai and her Microsoft supporter for copyright violations. The New York Times has filed a similar lawsuit against chatgpt manufacturer.
News Corp, the media giant who owns the post and Wall Street Journal, believes that “friendship is preferable to courtrooms”, according to her CEO Robert Thomson.
Last year, the company hit a content licensing agreement with Openai, reported that worth more than $ 250 million that included guards to protect its work.
“We would prefer to cheat rather than sue, give it that lawyers be the big winners in litigation,” Thomson said last July. “But to warn. If we don’t cheat you, we can be great.”
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Image Source : nypost.com