OpenAI has accused the Chinese AI startup DeepSeek of using its proprietary models to train a competing ChatGPT product, claiming this may breach their terms of service. This accusation comes in the wake of DeepSeek's disruptive impact on the AI market, resulting in massive losses for companies like Nvidia. Critics have pointed out the hypocrisy in OpenAI's stance, given its own history of utilizing copyrighted materials without proper attribution. Past statements from OpenAI's leadership further highlight the challenges and complexities surrounding AI training and copyright issues.
"The issue is when you [take it out of the platform and] are doing it to create your own model for your own purposes," a source close to OpenAI told the FT.
OpenAI has a long track record of hoovering up data with an astonishing disregard for giving credit or fairly compensating rights holders.
Put simply, it's roughly the equivalent of a school bully complaining to the teacher that his stolen lunch was stolen from him by another bully.
Funny on OpenAI, who totally didn't gobble up our data without as much as a nod to the original creators.
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