One of the great controversies of artificial intelligence ChatGPT (in addition to the catastrophic theories that surround it) is the subject of copyright. It has been feeding on information throughout these years without paying copyright or without respecting the laws regarding data protection; or without offering sources of the information that users receive.
GitHub Copilot, the OpenAI assistant, which uses artificial intelligence to suggest code and rich features in real time as we write code is sued for copyright infringement. Specifically, the lawsuit recalls that this program was built by training with code from “millions of public repositories” hosted on GitHub.
Well now, Sam Altman, the CEO of OpenAI has said that the company is being prepared to pay people when their artificial intelligences use their information.
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Laws for people to know if they talk to an AI
Sam Altman gave a lecture to the students of Clark Atlanta University, one of the main ones in Georgia, in the United States, during the opening act of the world tour “The future of artificial intelligence“.
He took advantage there to reveal some of the main conversations he had in his meeting at the White House a few days before. Altman said that one of the most important conversations at the AI CEO mini-summit with top US officials revolved around create “laws so people know if they’re talking to an AI,” something he supports.
Copyright and AI
Regarding copyright, Altman took a position on the side of copyright systems that They ensure that creators are paid for the value they create.
In the words of the CEO of OpenIA: “we are trying to work on new models in which if an AI system use your content or your style, get paid for it,” he said.
We will have to see if this is real. In practice we know that current generative AI systems train with large amounts of data from the Internet that contain material protected by copyright and neither pay for it nor even give them credit or mention.
Given the size of the large linguistic models used by OpenAI and its competitors, generative AI has been accused on many occasions as a tool that consistently infringes copyrights.
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Image | Markus Winkler on Unsplash