Tuesday, 02 January 2024 12:17 GMT

ANI Vs Openai: Delhi HC Orders Openai To Respond To Plea By Indian Music Industry In Copyright Case


(MENAFN- Live Mint) The Delhi high court on Monday directed Microsoft-backed OpenAI, a San Francisco-based artificial intelligence (AI) research organization, to respond to a petition from the Indian Music Industry (IMI), which seeks to join a copyright infringement lawsuit filed by Asian News International (ANI).

The ANI lawsuit accuses OpenAI of using its content without permission to train its ChatGPT model. IMI, representing major Bollywood labels like T-Series, Saregama, and Sony Music, is concerned about the unauthorized use of their sound recordings in AI training, arguing it constitutes copyright infringement.

Read this | OpenAI discussing localization of ChatGPT India data

The music labels claim that OpenAI, the maker of ChatGPT, and other AI systems can extract lyrics, music compositions, and sound recordings from the internet, potentially violating their copyrights. This mirrors a lawsuit filed by Germany's GEMA in November, which also accused OpenAI of using song lyrics without a licence to train its AI model.

Previously, the Federation of Indian Publishers and the Digital News Publishers Association (DNPA), both of which represent major publishing houses and media outlets, filed pleas to intervene in the case and sought to be made parties to the lawsuit. HT Media Ltd, which publishes Mint, is a member of DNPA.

During Monday's hearing, justice Amit Bansal, overseeing the case, said that affected parties must file their individual suits, noting that the current lawsuit filed by ANI could not continue expanding.

The court will hear the entire case on 21 February.

Read this | ANI vs OpenAI: Delhi HC to hear India's first GenAI copyright suit starting 21 February

This case represents the first copyright dispute involving OpenAI in India, with ANI accusing the company of using copyrighted content to train its large language models (LLMs), including ChatGPT. It also raises important legal questions around generative artificial intelligence (GenAI) and how India plans to regulate AI technologies in the context of copyright infringement.

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