The artificial intelligence company argue that turning over the logs would disclose confidential user information and that "99.99%" of the transcripts have nothing to do with the copyright infringement allegations in the case.
"To be clear: anyone in the world who has used ChatGPT in the past three years must now face the possibility that their personal conversations will be handed over to The Times to sift through at will in a speculative fishing expedition," the company said in a court filing.
The news outlets argued that the logs were necessary to determine whether ChatGPT reproduced their copyrighted content and to rebut OpenAI's assertion that they "hacked" the chatbot's responses to manufacture evidence. The lawsuit claims OpenAI misused their articles to train ChatGPT to respond to user prompts.
Magistrate Judge Ona Wang said in her order to produce the chats that users' privacy would be protected by the company's "exhaustive de-identification" and other safeguards. OpenAI has a Friday deadline to produce the transcripts.
OpenAI Chief Information Security Officer Dane Stuckey said in a blog post on Wednesday that sharing the logs would violate privacy and security protections and "force us to turn over tens of millions of highly personal conversations from people who have no connection to the Times' baseless lawsuit."
A New York Times spokesperson said OpenAI's blog post "purposely misleads its users and omits the facts."
"No ChatGPT user's privacy is at risk," the spokesperson said. "The court ordered OpenAI to provide a sample of chats, anonymized by OpenAI itself, under a legal protective order."
The OpenAI case is one of many pending lawsuits against tech companies over the alleged misuse of copyrighted work to train AI systems.
Reuters
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