Forbes December 18, 2024
Tonya M. Evans

Artificial intelligence (AI) has sparked transformative changes across industries, but its rapid evolution has also raised critical concerns about ownership, privacy, and control over creative expression. The centralized nature of most AI systems concentrates power in the hands of a few corporations, leaving copyright creators and owners vulnerable to exploitation. Companies like OpenAI recognize the legal limits of using unlicensed copyrighted materials to train ChatGPT tools. As reported by The Guardian, in a submission to the House of Lords communications and digital select committee, OpenAI said it could not train large language models such as its GPT-4 model – the technology behind ChatGPT – without access to copyrighted work.

Interestingly, Open AI’s strategic partner Microsoft (that reportedly holds a 49%...

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