This is the first time OpenAI has allowed an outside party to view its training data, and there are some major caveats.
The training data can only be viewed in a 'secure' room at OpenAI's San Francisco headquarters on a locked down computer that does not have access to the internet.
These stipulations sound more like the protocols for viewing state secrets than looking at AI training data, highlighting the intensity of the legal battle.
The case may set a legal precedent affecting how AI uses copyrighted material, as the authors argue their works were used without permission.
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