
A coalition of Indian book publishers, including prominent names like Bloomsbury, Penguin Random House, Cambridge University Press, Pan Macmillan, Rupa Publications, and S. Chand and Co., has filed a copyright infringement lawsuit against OpenAI in the Delhi High Court. The Federation of Indian Publishers (FIP) is leading this legal action.
The lawsuit centers on the use of copyrighted book content by OpenAI's ChatGPT to generate summaries, which the publishers argue could undermine book sales and creativity within the publishing industry. The FIP has demanded that OpenAI cease accessing their copyrighted works, negotiate licensing agreements, or delete the datasets used in AI training and outline compensation plans.
OpenAI has responded to the copyright lawsuit filed by Indian publishers in the Delhi High Court. OpenAI argued that the Delhi High Court lacks jurisdiction over the case because the company does not have any physical presence or servers in India.
OpenAI mentioned that deleting the training data, as requested by the publishers, would violate its legal obligations under US law. The Sam Altman led AI company emphasized that it is bound to maintain the integrity of their training data due to ongoing legal requirements.
OpenAI maintained that its AI systems make fair use of publicly available data, which is a common practice in AI development.
The court is scheduled to hear the case on January 28, 2025.
This case is part of a broader global trend where content creators are challenging the use of their copyrighted material in training AI systems. The outcome of this lawsuit could have significant implications for intellectual property rights and the future of AI development in India.
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