Company That Built AI On Stealing Copyrighted Material Claims DeepSeek AI Stole From It
OPENAI, which has achieved a valuation in excess of $150 billion in large part due to stealing hundreds of thousands of copyrighted works without permission to train its large language model on, has come out strongly against DeepSeek AI’s apparent copying of its AI model.
“Never in a million years did I think that when I created this thing designed to make people’s jobs obsolete so CEOs and investors can get bigger dividends that I too could be replaced by AI, it’s not fair,” explained OpenAI CEO Sam Altman, from his office made entirely of repurposed kettles and pots.
“When Open AI takes copyrighted protected works from artists, musicians, authors, news organisations and multitudes more, it’s called ‘innovation’ but when DeepSeek AI take our AI training model it’s actually something called ‘theft’, which is actually not okay,” added Altman.
Keen for people to understand what a travesty this brazen theft and breach of trust it is, Altman tried to put this in perspective for people.
“This isn’t some crappy piece of art or a novel slaved over by an artist for years, this is a large language model we’re talking about, something actually of value and worth. And remember, you can’t trust Chinese companies like this, they’re creepy,” Altman concluded.
Elswhere, ChatGPT failed to deliver an answer when WWN asked it about former OpenAI engineer turned whistleblower Suchir Balaji who died of an apparent suicide and was set to be called to testify against OpenAI in a copyright case.
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