The New York Times has taken steps to prevent its articles from being used to train artificial intelligence models.
Its permission to do so was granted in response to a recent update to Google’s privacy policy that discloses the search giant may collect public data from the web to train its AI services, such as Bard or Cloud AI.
Many large language models powering popular AI services like OpenAI’s ChatGPT are trained on vast datasets that could contain copyrighted or otherwise protected materials scraped from theweb without the original creator’s permission.
Microsoft also added new restrictions to its own TandCs that ban people from using its AI products to “create, train, or improve (directly or indirectly) any other AI service,” alongside banning users from scraping or extracting data from its AI tools.
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