"Everyone makes mistakes. OpenAI wants you to think its mistakes are just a product of a young company moving fast. That may be part of it. But it's also beginning to look like a strategy: Asking forgiveness instead of permission. OpenAI says it's sorry it used someone's intellectual property without their permission. And it promises to do better in the future."
"OpenAI's announcement on Thursday night that it had "paused" the ability for Sora users to make videos using the likeness of Martin Luther King Jr., after King's estate complained? Or are we talking about OpenAI's announcement earlier this month, when it said it would make it harder for Sora users to make videos using the likeness of Hollywood characters, after Hollywood complained?"
OpenAI has repeatedly used intellectual property without permission and later apologized while promising to do better. The company paused Sora's ability to create videos using Martin Luther King Jr.'s likeness after the estate complained, limited Sora's ability to create videos resembling Hollywood characters after industry objections, and stopped using a synthetic voice resembling Scarlett Johansson after her complaint. The pattern shows the company often only backtracks after rights holders and their lawyers object. There are two plausible interpretations: a large, fast-moving company that clumsily makes mistakes, or an organization that disregards intellectual property concerns when training models and producing outputs.
Read at Business Insider
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