Two other media companies have signed licensing agreements with OpenAI, allowing their content to be used to train their AI models and shared within ChatGPT. atlantic organization and Vox Media — edge’s parent company – both announced deals with OpenAI on Wednesday.
OpenAI is quickly signing partnerships with the media community to seek to license training materials and avoid copyright litigation. It recently struck a deal with News Corp (Wall Street Journal, this New York Post, and daily telegraph), Axel Springer (business insider and politics), Dot-dash Meredith (People, Better Homes & Gardens, Investopedia, Food & Wine, and very cool), this Financial Timesand Associated Press.
The prices for these deals appear to be based on the number of publications included. According to media reports, the News Corp.-OpenAI deal is expected to be worth $250 million over the next five years. Magazinewhile processing Financial Times Believed to be worth $5 to $10 million. Terms of the transaction atlantic organization and Vox Media have not disclosed.
OpenAI has been fighting to avoid copyright lawsuits over training materials and attribution
These agreements also cover how publisher content is displayed within ChatGPT. Content from Vox Media — including content from The Verge, Vox, New York Magazinediners, SBNation, and their archives—and atlantic organization Attribution links will be given when cited.
Vox Media spokesperson Lauren Starke said that Vox Media will start sharing content with OpenAI next week edge. Stark declined to disclose terms of the deal. Vox Media said in a press release that it will use OpenAI’s technology to “enhance its affiliate commerce product The Strategist Gift Scout” and expand its advertising data platform Forte.
atlantic organization It said it is developing a microsite called Atlantic Labs, where its team can try to develop artificial intelligence tools to “better serve journalism and readers.” Anna Burrows, spokesman atlantic organizationdeclined to disclose the terms of its deal in an email edge.
The deals also appear to provide OpenAI with protection from copyright lawsuits. Content creators ranging from comedians to newspapers argue that OpenAI’s training of its tools on their work, and ChatGPT’s subsequent ability to recite portions of their work, infringes on their copyrights.
New York Times Currently suing OpenAI and Microsoft Copyright infringement of ChatGPT and Microsoft Copilot. The lawsuit has cost $1 million so far, the newspaper said. this new york daily news, this Chicago Tribune, The Interceptand six other publishers later sued over similar claims.