COMING SOON: A New Way to Earn Passive Income with DeFi in 2025 LEARN MORE

Vivek Shah-led Ziff Davis sues ChatGPT’s parent company, OpenAI

In this post:

  • Ziff Davis has filed a lawsuit against OpenAI for copyright infringement. 
  • The digital media firm accused OpenAI of deliberately and relentlessly creating similar copies of its outlets’ works without consent. 
  • The Vivek Shah-led media company claimed that OpenAI removed copyright details from the digital works produced by its various outlets, including CNET and IGN. 

Ziff Davis, the owner of IGN, CNET, Everyday Health, and PCMag media outlets, has filed a lawsuit against OpenAI. The media firm alleged that OpenAI, ChatGPT’s parent company, has been using works produced by Ziff Davis’ outlets without its consent. 

As first reported, Ziff Davis, the digital media firm behind popular sites such as PCMag, Lifehacker, and IGN, filed a lawsuit on Thursday against OpenAI. The media firm joined a wave of giant companies that have sued the AI giant for using their content without permission. 

In its 62-page lawsuit filed in a Delaware court, Ziff Davis said OpenAI has deliberately and relentlessly recreated exact copies of its works. The lawsuit also claimed that OpenAI intentionally and relentlessly created derivatives of its works, infringing on the company’s copyrights and diluting its trademark.

Ziff Davis claims OpenAI used its work without consent

Ziff Davis, the firm that owns several digital outlets, including IGN, Everyday Health, PCMag, and Mashable, has sued OpenAI over claims of using its works without permission.

In a 62-page lawsuit filed in a Delaware federal court, Ziff Davis claimed OpenAI intentionally and continuously created exact copies of the works produced by various outlets owned by Ziff Davis. The Vivek Shah-led media firm said that it had instructed web crawlers to avoid scraping its data with the help of robots.txt file. 

The Vivek Shah-led media firm claimed that OpenAI violated this policy. The Mashable owner added that the artificial intelligence firm reportedly removed copyright details from the works it sucks up. The firm claimed that the AI firm copied some of its content from its outlets. It added that OpenAI also reproduced its published content without its direct permission.

See also  Microsoft shifts sales strategy, taps third-party firms to push AI software to SMBs

The Mashable owner also alleged that the AI giant firm stored the works of its outlets, which it allegedly used to develop responses in ChatGPT. 

The lawsuit read in part, “Ziff Davis has identified hundreds of full copies of the body text of Ziff Davis Works in merely the small sample of OpenAI’s WebText dataset that it made publicly available.” Ziff Davis asked the federal court to stop the AI firm from exploiting the works of its media outlets. The media firm also asked the court to compel OpenAI to destroy any models or datasets containing content from Ziff Davis media outlets. 

Ziff Davis revealed that it owned over 45 media brands. The Vivek Shah-led media conglomerate added that it employed over 3,800 staff, making it one of the largest media publishers to file a lawsuit against OpenAI so far. The company said that it produced over 2 million new articles annually. 

The PCMag owner also stated that its outlets averaged above 292 million user visits every month. Ziff Davis argued that OpenAI has abandoned its openness and transparent publication practices, leading to a violation of copyright laws. The media firm confirmed that it will prove that most of the LLMs used in training OpenAI models are infringed works of Ziff Davis outlets. 

See also  Jim Cramer on why he remains bullish on data center growth

Ziff Davis’s suit joins a series of lawsuits against OpenAI

OpenAI has signed multiple licensing agreements with the Washington Post, Vox Media, The Atlantic, The Associated Press, and The Financial Times. The IGN owner claimed that OpenAI did not have a licensing agreement with it. The media firm has joined the likes of The Intercept, The New York Times, AlterNet, and Raw Story in suing the artificial intelligence giant over copyright infringement.

OpenAI spokesperson Jason Deutrom recently argued that the chatbot helped with the improvement of human creativity. Duetrom added that ChatGPT enabled millions of users to improve their lives. He also said that their chatbot helped with medical research and scientific discovery.

While responding to the allegations of copyright infringement, the OpenAI spokesperson clarified that their models were designed to empower innovation and are trained using publicly available materials. He noted that all their AI models were grounded in fair use.

Cryptopolitan Academy: Want to grow your money in 2025? Learn how to do it with DeFi in our upcoming webclass. Save Your Spot

Share link:

Disclaimer. The information provided is not trading advice. Cryptopolitan.com holds no liability for any investments made based on the information provided on this page. We strongly recommend independent research and/or consultation with a qualified professional before making any investment decisions.

Most read

Loading Most Read articles...

Stay on top of crypto news, get daily updates in your inbox

Editor's choice

Loading Editor's Choice articles...

- The Crypto newsletter that keeps you ahead -

Markets move fast.

We move faster.

Subscribe to Cryptopolitan Daily and get timely, sharp, and relevant crypto insights straight to your inbox.

Join now and
never miss a move.

Get in. Get the facts.
Get ahead.

Subscribe to CryptoPolitan