OpenAI, under the leadership of Sam Altman, and tech giant Microsoft are in the spotlight facing a fresh class-action lawsuit. The lawsuit, filed by book authors, accuses both companies of utilizing copyrighted materials without permission to build a highly profitable AI system, triggering serious allegations of intellectual property theft.
Nicholas Basbanes and Nicholas Gage, non-fiction authors, have taken the initiative to file a lawsuit in Manhattan federal court, representing a group of writers who claim their copyrighted works have been consistently appropriated by Microsoft and OpenAI.
The lawsuit's central accusation compares the companies to common thieves, emphasizing their alleged infringement on intellectual property.
Seeking damages up to $150,000 for each work infringed, the lawsuit is a strong statement against what the authors perceive as unauthorized usage of their creations.
The crux of the lawsuit revolves around OpenAI's AI system, which supposedly relies on absorbing vast amounts of written content, including books attributed to Basbanes and Gage.
As of now, neither Microsoft nor OpenAI has released any official statement or comment addressing the allegations raised by the lawsuit.
This legal battle adds to the string of conflicts faced by OpenAI, as previously, they encountered a lawsuit from the Authors' Guild and a group of renowned authors like Jonathan Franzen, John Grisham, George R.R. Martin, and Jodi Picoult.