Spoiler alert: The answer to today’s Wordle is B-E-Z-O-S.
In a first-of-its-kind deal for the historic paper of record, The New York Times last week inked a deal to license its vast editorial library for use in Amazon’s various AI platforms. The agreement comes as the Gray Lady sues OpenAI and Microsoft for alleged copyright infringement, one of the major legal battles in the AI-spawned era of copyright war.
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Under the licensing deal (financial terms still undisclosed), Jeff Bezos’ e-commerce/cloud computing/digital media giant can showcase NYT news articles, recipes, and other material across its consumer-facing AI programs — Alexa will now tell you all about Alison Roman’s chickpea coconut stew. It’s a first for the NYT but hardly for the rest of the industry. Condé Nast, The Atlantic, Axel Springer, the Associated Press, and the Bezos-owned Washington Post have all struck similar licensing agreements with OpenAI. In a situation similar to the NYT’s, with one of the same players, News Corp is concurrently suing Perplexity AI over copyright-infringement claims and licensing its content to OpenAI.
Translation: If you want your chatbots to train on and feature these companies’ content, pay up. But just how much is news content worth to the AI industry? Depends on whom you ask:
Fair Use It or Lose It: AI firms tend to argue that their models are trained on publicly available data — “fair use” under copyright law. Whether the law agrees or not is still being sorted out, though it seems clear the AI industry sees its existence hinging on courts agreeing with its interpretation. In the UK, a coterie of high-profile performing artists, including Elton John, Dua Lipa, and Ian McKellan, are pushing for a law that would require artists to opt-in to their works being used to train AI models. Last week, former Deputy Prime Minister and ex-Meta executive Nick Clegg told British outlet The Times that passing such a law in the UK, while other countries do not, “would basically kill the AI industry in this country overnight.”
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