The Times sued OpenAI in December, arguing that the company used its articles without permission to train ChatGPT.
OpenAI accidentally erased a drive full of evidence gathered by lawyers for The New York Times and other news organizations.
As part of an ongoing copyright lawsuit, The New York Times says it spent 150 hours sifting through OpenAI’s training data looking for potential evidence—only for OpenAI to delete all of its work.
In a court filing, lawyers for The NY Times and Daily news say that OpenAI accidentally deleted potential evidence against it ...
OpenAI may have accidentally deleted important data related to its ongoing copyright lawsuit brought by the New York Times.
File Error OpenAI made a major oopsie when its engineers accidentally deleted a bunch of evidence sought by the New York ...
OpenAI had agreed to let the publishers’ lawyers look through its AI training datasets for any of their copyrighted content.
OpenAI keeps deleting data that could allegedly prove the AI company violated copyright laws by training ChatGPT on authors' ...
OpenAI, the artificial intelligence company behind ChatGPT, has inadvertently erased crucial evidence in its ongoing ...
OpenAI's accidental data deletion disrupts a major copyright lawsuit with The New York Times over alleged misuse of content ...
The New York Times said in a court filing that key parts of its evidence of OpenAi's plagiarism of its articles were erased.
The New York Times and Daily News claimed that OpenAI accidentally deleted key data in the ongoing copyright lawsuit against OpenAI.