OpenAI, ChatGPT
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By Blake Brittain March 16 (Reuters) - Encyclopedia Britannica and its Merriam-Webster subsidiary have sued OpenAI in Manhattan federal court for allegedly misusing their reference materials to train its artificial intelligence models.
The company that bankrolled ChatGPT's rise is reportedly considering taking its partner to court. After fissures and mutual suspicion, the relationship may have reached the point of no return The Financial Times does not run stories like this unless they are sourced.
OpenAI said it wants to certify 10 million Americans by 2030 as companies increasingly seek out "AI-savvy workers."
As artificial intelligence AI is ruling over every sector, it also often face scrutiny over using different domains without following proper set of rules or important guardrails.
Exclusive: OpenAI is launching a worldwide competition to find its next star researchers. Do you have what it takes?
A Manhattan federal judge threw out of the suit for lack of standing, but the pair of digital publishers say their copyright claims are consistent with other OpenAI cases that have advanced in the same jurisdiction.
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Musk launched Grokipedia last October as an alternative to Wikipedia. In a post in September, Musk said Grokipedia would be “a massive improvement over Wikipedia.” He has also