Miami Herald

Newspapers sue OpenAI, Microsoft, claim copyright infringeme­nt

- BY SHERI WALSH UPI.com

Eight major U.S. newspapers, including The Chicago Tribune and The New York Daily News, are suing OpenAI and Microsoft over what they say is copyright infringeme­nt for using their articles to train artificial intelligen­ce.

Alden Global Capital, which owns the eight newspapers, filed a federal complaint Tuesday in the U.S. Southern District of New York, months after the New York Times filed a similar lawsuit.

The newspapers accuse the tech companies of “purloining millions of the publishers’ copyrighte­d articles without permission and without payment” to commercial­ize OpenAI’s ChatGPT and Microsoft’s Copilot. They also claim the companies failed to link to original content and removed journalist­s’ names from their works.

“We’ve spent billions of dollars gathering informatio­n and reporting news at our publicatio­ns and we can’t allow OpenAI and Microsoft to expand the Big Tech playbook of stealing our work to build their own businesses at our expense,” Frank Pine, executive editor for MediaNewsG­roup and Tribune Publishing, said in a statement.

“They don’t want to pay for the content without which they would have no product at all. That’s not fair use, and it’s not fair,” Pine added. “It needs to stop.”

Alden is the nation’s second-largest newspaper publisher with The Chicago Tribune, The New York Daily News, The Orlando Sentinel, The Sun Sentinel of Florida, The San Jose

Mercury News, The Denver Post, The Orange County Register and The St. Paul Pioneer Press.

The New York Times was the first to sue Microsoft and OpenAI in December,

for creating what the newspaper called a business model based on mass copyright infringeme­nt. According to The Times’ lawsuit, both companies trained their artificial intelligen­ce to “rely on large-language models that were built by copying and using millions of The Times’ copyrighte­d news articles, in-depth investigat­ions, opinion pieces, reviews, how-to guides and more.”

As The Times and Alden sue tech companies over copyright violations for using their articles, other news publishers – including the Financial Times – are negotiatin­g deals to get paid millions of dollars a year.

The Times, instead, is suing for billions of dollars in damages. Alden newspapers, which is demanding a jury trial, is seeking unspecifie­d monetary damages for content licensing and lost revenue from ads and subscripti­ons.

 ?? COSTFOTO Sipa USA / USA TODAY NETWORK ?? An OpenAI interface is displayed on a mobile phone.
COSTFOTO Sipa USA / USA TODAY NETWORK An OpenAI interface is displayed on a mobile phone.

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