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OpenAI vs ANI: Why ‘hallucinations’ are unlikely to go away soon

Microsoft-backed OpenAI is no stranger to lawsuits. The soaring reach of its large language model -based chatbot, ChatGPT, has continually rattled media houses, artists, and content creators across the world, prompting them to initiate legal action for copyright infringement. ChatGPT-3.5, for instance, was trained on 570GB of text data from the internet containing hundreds of billions of words, including text harvested from books, articles, and websites, including social media, following which these chatbots generate new content like text, images, videos, code, etc., with natural language prompts. Simply put, it wants to be paid for the copyrighted content that AI-powered chatbots like OpenAI and Bing Chat have been allegedly reproducing verbatim in many cases. Big tech companies like OpenAI and Meta have also got some reprieve in the courts in specific cases of copyright violations but the courts are yet to address whether or not the unauthorised use of material scraped from the internet to train AI models infringes copyrights on a massive scale.

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