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Legal implications of using freelancer’s work for artificial intelligence training

i accept @djvice refers to authors who work as freelancers, who write pieces for a medium under certain conditions. These terms are usually set out in a contract that specifically states what the medium may do with the freelancer’s work, such as publishing it in a newspaper, on a website websites, or use for promotional purposes. However, the use of these texts for artificial intelligence training, such as AI models, often falls outside the standard contractual agreements or is not specifically mentioned by name. Which could lead to (legal) problems, but in this agreement that is more of a problem at the Financial Times than at OpenAI. Or it must be clearly stated that all rights are transferred.

@furnitureAlthough you are not a freelancer, do you have an idea if articles on Tweakers, for example, can be automatically used for such purposes, or if they would have to be rearranged for each employee cheap? This includes/assumes that the copyright of the texts written by you (read: the editors) at least belongs to Tweakers as an employee.

[Reactie gewijzigd door jdh009 op 29 april 2024 20:01]

2024-04-29 17:17:00
#OpenAI #signs #deal #Financial #Times #provide #training #data

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